PHYS_2326_012009
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Transcript PHYS_2326_012009
Forces and fields obey the
superposition principle:
Field from a group of
particles is a vector sum of
fields from each particle
E E1 E 2 ... Ei
i
E x E1x E2 x ... Eix
i
E y E1 y E2 y ... Eiy
i
E z E1z E2 z ... Eiz
i
Electric Field Properties
• A small positive test charge is used to determine the
electric field at a given point
• The electric field is a vector field that can be symbolized
by lines in space called electric field lines
• The electric field is continuous, existing at every point, it
just changes in magnitude with distance from the source
Electric Field Equation
• Electric Field
F
E
qo
1 qsource
qsource
E
rˆ ke 2 rˆ
2
4 o r
r
• For a continuous charge distribution
dq
dq
dE ke 2 rˆ E ke 2 rˆ
r
r
For spatially distributed charges – we can sub-divide the object into the small,
“point-like” charges and integrate (sum up) the individual fields.
Often, we assign charge density for such spacious charged objects
... ... dq
i
dq dl for lines (1 d )
dq dA for surfaces (2 d )
dq dV for volumes (3 d )
, , correspond ing charge densities
(r )
E.g. in 3 - d : E(r) ke
E x ( x, y, z ) ke
| r - r |
3
(r r ) dV
x x
(x,y,z) dx dy dz
2
2
2 3/ 2
(( x x) ( y y ) ( z z ) )
Examples of field calculations: fields of continuous charge
distributions
Field of a ring of charge on the symmetry axis
Ex dEx
E x ke
dQ
dQ
cos
k
e x2 a2
r2
E Ex
kQx
( x 2 a 2 )3/ 2
x
x2 a2
Positive charge is uniformly distributed
around a semicircle. The electric field
that this charge produces at the center of
curvature P is in
A. the +x-direction.
B. the –x-direction.
C. the +y-direction.
D. the –y-direction.
E. none of the above
Field of a disk, uniformly charged on the symmetry axis
Surface charge density is , radius R
Area dA of a ring of radius r
dA 2 rdr;
R
rdr
E x 2 ke x 2 2 3/ 2
(x r )
0
E x 2 ke x
x2 R2
x2
x2 r2 z
dz 2rdr
dz
1 x 2 R 2
2 ke x
|x 2
3/ 2
z
z
dQ
; dQ 2 r dr
dA
Changing variable of integration
x
Ex
1
2
2
2 0
R x
For the limit of x<<R, we have an electric field of the infinite
plane sheet of charge and it is independent of the distance from
the plane (assuming that distance x<<linear dimensions of the sheet)
E plane
2 0
Electric Field Line Properties
• Relation between field lines and electric field vectors:
a. The direction of the tangent to a field line is the direction of
the electric field E at that point
b. The number of field lines per unit area is proportional to the
magnitude of E: the more field lines the stronger E
• Electric field lines point in direction of force on a positive test
charge therefore away from a positive charge and toward a
negative charge
• Electric field lines begin on positive charges and end on negative
charges or infinity
• No two electric field lines can cross
Electric field lines
E is tangent to the electric field line – no 2 lines can
cross (E is unique at each point)
Magnitude of E is proportional to the density of the
lines
Remember, electric field lines are NOT trajectories!
When a particle moves on a curved path, the direction of
acceleration (and hence of the force) is not collinear with the
tangent to the curve
Electric dipole
Many physical systems are described
as electric dipoles – hugely important
concept
Water is a good solvent for ionic and polar substances
specifically because of its dipole properties
Torque on the electric dipole
r
r
p qd
(electric dipole moment from “-” to “+”)
Electric field is uniform in space
Net Force is zero
Torque is not zero
Net
(qE )(d sin )
p E
(torque is a vector)
Stable and unstable equilibrium
p E
p E
Charge #2
Three point charges lie at the vertices of an
equilateral triangle as shown. Charges #2
and #3 make up an electric dipole.
The net electric torque that Charge #1 exerts
on the dipole is
+q
Charge #1
+q
y
–q
x
A. clockwise.
B. counterclockwise.
C. zero.
D. not enough information given to decide
Charge #3
Electric field of a dipole
E-field on the line connecting two charges
1 1
E keq 2 2
r2 r1
-
A
+
E
r2
d
2 p ke
E 3
r
r1
E-field on the line perpendicular to the dipole’s axis
E 2E 2 sin
E2
E
2
E2
d
r
E 2 ke
A
E1
-
q
r2
qd
E ke 3
r
r
r
p
E k e 3
r
when r>>d
+
d
General case – combination of the above two
3( p r ) p
E
r 3
5
r
r
Dipole’s Potential Energy
E-field does work on the dipole – changes its potential energy
Work done by the field (remember your mechanics class?)
dW d pE sin d
U p E
Dipole aligns itself to minimize its potential energy
in the external E-field.
Net force is not necessarily zero in the non-uniform
electric field – induced polarization and electrostatic
forces on the uncharged bodies
Reading Assignment : Chapter 21.5- 21.7
Next Lecture – in-class quiz about the material
we covered (chapter 21 )
Homework Assignment:
Check www.masteringphysics.com this afternoon
Due next Tuesday by end of class