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III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

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III.A 3, Gauss’ Law. We have used Coulomb’s Law (the governing law in electrostatics, in case you didn’t know) to derive , the electric field of a point charge. However, it the charge is distributed over a plane, cylinder or sphere, we will need another method. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Page 2: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

We have used Coulomb’s Law (the governing law in electrostatics, in case you didn’t know) to derive ,

the electric field of a point charge. However, it the charge is distributed over a plane, cylinder or sphere, we

will need another method.

Page 3: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Flux – rate of flow through an area. Could be fluid flow, magnetic field

lines or, our current interest, electric field lines. By definition, . (N·m2/C)

Page 4: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Four algebraic examples and one calculus example for calculating

electric flux.

Page 5: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. Find the net flux through the cylinder in electric field as shown.

Eb

a c

Page 6: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Gauss’ Law relates the electric fields at points on a surface (a Gaussian surface) to the net

charge enclosed by that surface

Page 7: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. Find the electric flux through a Guassian sphere about a point charge.

Page 8: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

So, Gauss’ Law is

Page 9: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Gauss Law as shown is only true when the charge is in a vacuum. Include the

sign of the charge since it gives the direction of the electric flux. If q is

positive, the net flux is outward. If q is negative, the net flux is inward.

Page 10: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. In terms of r and linear charge density λ, find the electrical field about a cylinder of uniform charge density. Graph E vs. r for the cylinder.

Page 11: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. In terms of area charge density σ, find the electric field of a thin conducting plate.

Page 12: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. Find the electric field between the two charged conducting plates in terms the area charge density.

Page 13: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. For a uniformly charge conducting spherical shell of inner radius a and outer radius b, find the electric field for a Gaussian surface where r < a, a < r < b, and r > b. Graph E vs. r for the shell.

Page 14: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. Find the electric field for a uniformly charged non-conducting sphere of radius R when r < R and r ≥ R. Graph E vs. r for the sphere.

Page 15: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. A non-conducting sphere or radius R has a non-uniform charged density described by the function where ρO and a are constants. Find the electric field when r < R and r ≥ R. Graph E vs. r for the sphere.

Page 16: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Charged isolated conductor

1. If excess charge is placed on an isolated conductor, all the excess charge will move to the surface of the conductor. Therefore, E inside this conductor is zero.

2. Conductor with a cavity. Excess charge resides on the surface and E inside the conductor is zero.

3. A shell of uniform charge attracts or repels a charged particle outside the sphere as if the charge were concentrated at the center of the sphere.

Page 17: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law
Page 18: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. Use Gauss’ Law to show the electric field inside a charged hollow metal sphere is zero.

Page 19: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. A solid metal sphere with radius a, carrying a charge of +q is placed inside, and concentric with a neutral hollow metal sphere of inner radius b and outer radius c. Determine the electric field for r < a,a < r < b, b < r < c, and r > c.

Page 20: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Parallel Plate Capacitors

Page 21: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

A derivation

Page 22: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

So, you (maybe) can see capacitance measures the capacity for: holding charge; storing electrical potential energy; or storing an electric field.

Capacitance depends upon the geometry of the capacitor

Page 23: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. A 10-nF parallel-plate capacitor holds a charge of magnitude 50 μC on each plate. a) What is the potential difference between the plates? b) If the plates are separated by a distance of 0.2 mm, what is the area of each plate?

Page 24: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Capacitors of other geometries

Page 25: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. A long cable consists of a solid conducting cylinder of radius a, which carries a linear charge density of +λ, concentric with an outer cylindrical shell with inner radius b, which carries a charge density –λ. This is a coaxial cable. Determine the capacitance of the cable.

Page 26: III.A 3, Gauss’ Law

Ex. A spherical conducting shell of radius a, which carries charge +Q, is concentric with an out spherical conducting shell of inner radius b and carries a charge of –Q. What is the capacitance of the spherical capacitor?