Слайд 1 - Georgia State University
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Reading: Chapter 28
E
Q
4π ε o r
2
ke
Q
r
2
For r > a
Gauss’s Law
1
Chapter 28
Gauss’s Law
2
Electric Flux
Definition:
• Electric flux is the product of the
magnitude of the electric field and the
surface area, A, perpendicular to the
field
• ΦE = EA
• The field lines may make some angle θ
with the perpendicular to the surface
• Then ΦE = EA cos θ
E
normal
E EA
E
E E A cos
3
Electric Flux: Surface as a Vector
Vector, corresponding to a Flat Surface of Area A, is determined
by the following rules:
the vector is orthogonal to the surface
the magnitude of the vector is equal to the area A
The first rule
A
90
o
the vector is orthogonal to the surface
normal
does not determine the direction of A .
There are still two possibilities:
Area = A
A
or
90
o
90
o
A
You can choose any of them
4
Electric Flux: Surface as a Vector
If we consider more complicated surface then the directions of
vectors should be adjusted, so the direction of vector is a smooth
function of the surface point
correct
or
A2
A1
wrong
or
A3
5
Electric Flux
Definition:
• Electric flux is the scalar product of
electric field and the vector A
• EA
A
E
E E A E A co s 0
or
E
A
E E A E A co s 0
6
Electric Flux
1
E 1 2
area A1
E
A1
area A2
A2
90
o
2 E A 2 E A 2 cos(90 ) E A 2 sin
o
2
1 E A1 E A1 sin
flux is positive
E E A1 sin E A2 sin
E
if
A1
E
E E A1 sin
2 0
A2
then
A1
E E A1 cos E A2 cos
flux is negative
A2
A 2 and E are
orthogonal
7
Electric Flux
• In the more general case, look
at a small flat area element
E E i Ai c o s θ i E i Ai
• In general, this becomes
E lim
Ai 0
E
i
Ai
E dA
surface
• The surface integral means the
integral must be evaluated over
the surface in question
• The units of electric flux will be
N.m2/C2
8
Electric Flux: Closed Surface
The vectors A i point in different
directions
At each point, they are
perpendicular to the surface
By convention, they point
outward
E lim
Ai 0
E
i
Ai
E dA
surface
9
Electric Flux: Closed Surface
2
Closed surface
E 1 2 3 4 5 6
6
3
5
E is orthogonal to A 3 , A 4 , A 5 , and A 6
Then
3 E A3 0
4 E A4 0
5 E A5 0
6 E A6 0
1
E
E 1 2
4
E
A3
90
o
1
1 E A1 E A1 co s(9 0 ) E A1 sin
o
A1
3
2
2 E A2 E A2
A2
4
A4
E E ( A2 A1 sin )
but
A2 A1 sin
A1
A2
Then
E 0
10
(no charges inside closed surface)
Electric Flux: Closed Surface
• A positive point charge, q, is
located at the center of a sphere
of radius r
• The magnitude of the electric
field everywhere on the surface
of the sphere is
Spherical
surface
E = keq / r2
• Electric field is perpendicular to
the surface at every point, so
E has the same direction as
A at every point.
11
Electric Flux: Closed Surface
E has the same direction as A at every point.
E ke
q
r
2
Then
Spherical
surface
E i dA i E dA i
i
i
E A0 E 4 r 4 r k e
2
4 k e q
q
0
2
q
r
2
Gauss’s Law
does not depend on
r
ONLY BECAUSE
E
1
12 r
2
Electric Flux: Closed Surface
E and A have opposite directions at every point.
|q |
E ke
r
2
Spherical
surface
Then
E dA
i
i
E dA i
i
i
E A0 E 4 r 4 r k e
2
4 k e | q |
q
0
2
|q |
r
2
Gauss’s Law
does not depend on
r
ONLY BECAUSE
E 13
1
r
2
Gauss’s Law
The net flux through any closed surface
surrounding a point charge, q, is given by q/εo
and is independent of the shape of that
surface
The net electric flux through a closed surface
that surrounds no charge is zero
Ai
q
E
Ai
q
0
E
q
q
0
14
Gauss’s Law
Gauss’s law states
E
E dA
q in
εo
qin is the net charge inside the surface
E is the total electric field and may have contributions
from charges both inside and outside of the surface
Ai
q
E
Ai
q
0
E
q
q
0
15
Gauss’s Law
Gauss’s law states
E
E dA
q in
εo
qin is the net charge inside the surface
E is the total electric field and may have contributions from
charges both inside and outside of the surface
q5
q2
q1
q3
q1 q 2 q 3 q 4
0
q4
q6
q7
16
Gauss’s Law
Gauss’s law states
E
E dA
q in
εo
qin is the net charge inside the surface
E is the total electric field and may have contributions
from charges both inside and outside of the surface
q5
q2
q1
0
q3
q4
q6
q7
17
Gauss’s Law
Gauss’s law states
E
E dA
q in
εo
qin is the net charge inside the surface
E is the total electric field and may have contributions
from charges both inside and outside of the surface
q5
q2
0
q
q
q4
q6
q7
18
Gauss’s Law: Problem
What is the flux through surface 1
1 2 0
2 E A0 E A0
A1
1 2 E A0
1
E
A2
A0
2
A3
19
Chapter 28
Gauss’s Law: Applications
20
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Although Gauss’s law can, in theory, be solved to find
E for any charge configuration, in practice it is limited to
symmetric situations
To use Gauss’s law, you want to choose a Gaussian
surface over which the surface integral can be simplified
and the electric field determined
Take advantage of symmetry
Remember, the gaussian surface is a surface you
choose, it does not have to coincide with a real surface
E dA
q in
εo
q5
q1 q 2 q 3 q 4
0
q6
q2
q1
q3
q4
21
Gauss’s Law: Point Charge
E
q
SYMMETRY:
E - direction - along the radius
E
- depends only on radius, r
q
0
Only in this case the magnitude of
electric field is constant on the
Gaussian surface and the flux can be
easily evaluated
- Gauss’s Law
E i dA i E dA i E A 0 E 4 r
i
Then
Gaussian Surface – Sphere
2
- definition of the Flux
i
q
4 r E
2
E ke
q
r
2
22
Gauss’s Law: Applications
E dA
• Try to choose a surface that satisfies one or more of these conditions:
– The value of the electric field can be argued from symmetry to be
constant over the surface
– The dot product of E.dA can be expressed as a simple algebraic
product EdA because E and dA are parallel
– The dot product is 0 because E and dA are perpendicular
– The field can be argued to be zero over the surface
correct Gaussian surface
wrong Gaussian surface
23
q in
εo
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Spherically Symmetric Charge Distribution
The total charge is Q
SYMMETRY:
E
A
E - direction - along the radius
E
- depends only on radius, r
• Select a sphere as the
gaussian surface
• For r >a
E
E
E d A E d A 4π r
Q
4π ε o r
2
ke
Q
r
2
2
E
q in
εo
Q
εo
The electric field is the same as
for the point charge Q
24
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Spherically Symmetric Charge Distribution
E
Q
4π ε o r
2
ke
Q
r
The electric field is the same as
for the point charge Q !!!!!
2
Q
a
For r > a
Q
For r > a
25
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Spherically Symmetric Charge Distribution
E
SYMMETRY:
A
E - direction - along the radius
E
- depends only on radius, r
• Select a sphere as the
gaussian surface, r < a
q in
Q
4
3
a
4
3
r Q
3
3
r
3
a
3
Q
E
E d A E d A 4π r
E
q in
4π ε o r
2
ke
Qr
a
3
3
1
r
2
ke
2
E
Q
a
3
q in
εo
r
26
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Spherically Symmetric Charge Distribution
• Inside the sphere, E varies
linearly with r
E → 0 as r → 0
• The field outside the sphere
is equivalent to that of a point
charge located at the center
of the sphere
27
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Field due to a thin spherical shell
• Use spheres as the gaussian surfaces
• When r > a, the charge inside the surface is Q and
E = keQ / r2
• When r < a, the charge inside the surface is 0 and E = 0
28
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Field due to a thin spherical shell
• When r < a, the charge inside the surface is 0 and E = 0
A1
q 2 A2
A1 r1
A 2 r2
2
r1
E2
the same
solid angle
q 1 A1
E1 ke
q1
2
1
r
ke
2
A1
2
1
r
r1
2
ke
2
1
r
k e
E1
E 2 ke
r2
q2
2
2
r
ke
A2
2
2
r
r2
2
ke
2
2
r
k e
E1 E 2
E1 E 2 0
A2
Only because in Coulomb law
1
E 29
2
r
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Field from a line of charge
• Select a cylindrical Gaussian surface
– The cylinder has a radius of r and
a length of ℓ
• Symmetry:
E is constant in magnitude (depends
only on radius r) and perpendicular
to the surface at every point on the
curved part of the surface
The end view
30
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Field from a line of charge
dA
The flux through this surface is 0
The flux through this surface:
E
E d A E d A E 2π r
q in
εo
q in λ
E 2πr
E
The end view
λ
2πεr
o
λ
εo
2ke
λ
r
31
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Field due to a plane of charge
• Symmetry:
E must be perpendicular to the plane
and must have the same magnitude
at all points equidistant from the
plane
dA
• Choose a small cylinder whose axis
is perpendicular to the plane for the
gaussian surface
The flux through this surface is 0
32
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Field due to a plane of charge
E2
A2
A4
A5
h
dA
h
A3
A6
A1
E1
E1 E 2 E
A1 A2 A
The flux through this surface is 0
E 1 A1 E 2 A 2 E A E A 2 E A
q in
0
A
0
2EA
A
0
E
2 0
does not depend on h
33
Gauss’s Law: Applications
E
E 2ke
2 0
r
34
Gauss’s Law: Applications
Q
4
3
πa ρ
3
4
E ke
E
4
3
Q
a
3
r ke 3
3
πa ρ
a
3
r
4
3
πk e ρr
πk e ρr
35
Example
Find electric field inside the hole
R
r
a
36
E
4
3
R
πk e ρr1
E
4
3
R
r
a
r1
r
r2
E
4
3
R
E
πk e ρr2
4
3
πk e ρr1
r1
a
4
3
πk e ρr
r2
πk e ρr2
4
3
πk e ρr
( 1 r2 )
4
3
πk e ρa co n s37t
Example
The sphere has a charge Q and radius a. The point
charge –Q/8 is placed at the center of the sphere.
Find all points where electric field is zero.
E1
r
E2
E1 ke
Q
a
E2 ke
r
3
Q
8r
2
r
E1 E 2 0
ke
r
3
a
Q
a
3
8
3
r ke
Q
8r
2
r
a
2
38
Chapter 28
Conductors in Electric Field
39
Electric Charges: Conductors and Isolators
Electrical conductors are materials in which
some of the electrons are free electrons
These electrons can move relatively freely
through the material
Examples of good conductors include copper,
aluminum and silver
Electrical insulators are materials in which all
of the electrons are bound to atoms
These electrons can not move relatively freely
through the material
Examples of good insulators include glass, rubber
and wood
Semiconductors are somewhere between
insulators and conductors
40
Electrostatic Equilibrium
Definition:
when there is no net motion of charge
within a conductor, the conductor is
said to be in electrostatic equilibrium
Because the electrons can move freely through the
material
no motion means that there are no electric forces
no electric forces means that the electric field
inside the conductor is 0
If electric field inside the conductor is not 0, E 0 then
there is an electric force F qE and, from the second
Newton’s law, there is a motion of free electrons.
F qE
41
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium
• The electric field is zero everywhere inside the
conductor
• Before the external field is applied,
free electrons are distributed
throughout the conductor
• When the external field is applied, the
electrons redistribute until the
magnitude of the internal field equals
the magnitude of the external field
• There is a net field of zero inside the
conductor
42
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium
• If an isolated conductor carries a charge, the charge
resides on its surface
Electric filed is 0,
so the net flux through
Gaussian surface is 0
E dA
Then
q in 0
q in
εo
43
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium
• The electric field just outside a charged conductor is
perpendicular to the surface and has a magnitude of σ/εo
• Choose a cylinder as the gaussian surface
• The field must be perpendicular to the surface
– If there were a parallel component to E,
charges would experience a force and
accelerate along the surface and it would
not be in equilibrium
• The net flux through the gaussian surface is
through only the flat face outside the
conductor
– The field here is perpendicular to the
surface
σA
σ
E
A
a
n
d
E
• Gauss’s law:
E
εo
εo
44
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium
E
σ
σ
εo
σ
E 0
σ
σ
σ
45
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium: Example
Find electric field if the conductor spherical shell has zero charge
r2
r1
q 0
conductor
E 0
46
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium: Example
Find electric field if the conductor spherical shell has zero charge
r2
r1
E 0
The total charge
inside this Gaussian
surface is 0, so the
electric field is 0
q 0
surface charge, total charge is –q<0
surface charge, total charge is q>0
This is because the total charge of the conductor is 0!!!
47
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium: Example
Find electric field if the conductor spherical shell has zero charge
r2
r1
E 0
The total charge
inside this Gaussian
surface is q, so the
electric field is
r
2
q 0
E ke
q
surface charge, total charge is q>0
This is because the total charge of the conductor is 0!!!
total charge is –q<0
48
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium: Example
Find electric field if the conductor spherical shell has zero charge
r2
q 0
2
r1
r
E 0
E ke
q
E ke
q
r
2
surface charge, total charge is q>0
This is because the total charge of the conductor is 0!!!
total charge is –q<0
49
Conductor in Electrostatic Equilibrium: Example
Find electric field if the charge of the conductor spherical shell is Q
r2
q 0
2
r1
r
E 0
E ke
Q q
E ke
q
r
2
surface charge, total charge is Q+q>0
This is because the total charge of the conductor is Q!!!
total charge is –q<0
50