A physics lab experiment uses a Coulomb torsion balance to determine the charges on two small metal spheres A and B. The spheres are identical conducting spheres of the same size.
From prior qualitative tests (triboelectric series, etc.), it is known that sphere A carries positive charge +QA (QA>0) and sphere B carries negative charge −QB (QB>0), with QA>QB.
Spheres A and B are placed with their centers a distance r apart. The twist angle of the torsion wire shows an attractive force of magnitude F1 acting between them.
Using an insulating rod, spheres A and B are brought into contact once. After charge redistribution is complete, the spheres are separated again to center-to-center distance r.
Now a repulsive force of magnitude F2 is observed between the two spheres.
No charge leaks to the surroundings. Each sphere is small enough relative to r to be treated as a point charge.
From these observations, find the initial charge magnitudes QA and QB.
The values QA and QB can each be written as x×10−9 C and y×10−9 C respectively (where x,y are positive integers).
Compute 10x+y and give the answer as a positive integer.
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