With insulators, you can often use Gauss’ law in combination with the principle of superposition. (PoS is that the field from two sources is the vector.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gauss’ Law and Applications
Advertisements

CONDUCTORS + CAPACITORS
POTENTIAL February 1, 2009 This Week We complete Gauss’s Law We begin the topic of POTENTIAL – Chapter 25. Problem Session Wednesday Morning Examination.
Chapter 22: The Electric Field II: Continuous Charge Distributions
Electric Potential AP Physics Montwood High School R. Casao.
Continuous Charge Distributions
Electrical Energy and Electric Potential AP Physics C.
Ch. 24 Electric Flux Gauss's Law
Week #3 Gauss’ Law September 7, What’s up Doc?? At this moment I do not have quiz grades unless I get them at the last minute. There was a short.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 21 Electric Charge and Electric Field.
Chapter 23 Gauss’ Law.
February 16, 2010 Potential Difference and Electric Potential.
Chapter 22 Electric Potential.
Real Insulators (Dielectrics) If I bring a charged rod to a leaf electrometer: A] nothing will happen B] nothing will happen until I touch the electrometer.
Work done by electric force (source: fixed charges) on a test charge depends only on endpoints, not on path. (You can see this easily for a single fixed.
Hw: All Chapter 5 problems and exercises. Test 1 results Average 75 Median 78 >90>80>70>60>50
If I put no excess charge on the conductor, the net charge on its inner surface will be: a] 0 b] +Q c] -Q d] -2Q e] cannot determine.
A Charged, Thin Sheet of Insulating Material
Real Insulators (Dielectrics)
Chapter 24 Gauss’s Law.
Electricity and Magnetism
Topic 9.3 Electric Field, Potential, and Energy
Chapter 23 Gauss’s Law.
Physics 1502: Lecture 6 Today’s Agenda Announcements: –Lectures posted on: –HW assignments, solutions.
Hw: All Chapter 5 problems and exercises. Outline Applications of Gauss’s Law - The single Fixed Charge -Field of a sphere of charge -Field of a spherical.
Steps to Applying Gauss’ Law
AP Physics: Electricity & Magnetism
Gauss’s Law.
Lecture 3 Electrical Energy Chapter 16.1  16.5 Outline Potential Difference Electric Potential Equipotential Surface.
From Chapter 23 – Coulomb’s Law
Coulomb’s Law Point Charge :. Line Charge : Surface Charge :
Electric Energy and Capacitance
Gauss’ Law.
a b c Gauss’ Law … made easy To solve the above equation for E, you have to be able to CHOOSE A CLOSED SURFACE such that the integral is TRIVIAL. (1)
A b c Gauss' Law.
Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 23 Gauss’ Law Key contents Electric flux Gauss’ law and Coulomb’s law Applications of Gauss’ law.
Physics.
Chapter 25 Electric Potential Electrical Potential and Potential Difference When a test charge is placed in an electric field, it experiences a.
Electric Charge and Electric Field
Chapter 21 Gauss’s Law. Electric Field Lines Electric field lines (convenient for visualizing electric field patterns) – lines pointing in the direction.
Electricity and Magnetism Review 1: Units 1-6
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 4 – Electricity & Magnetism (Electrostatics) a. Electric Charge, Electric Field & Gauss’ Law.
Chapter 22 Gauss’s Law Chapter 22 opener. Gauss’s law is an elegant relation between electric charge and electric field. It is more general than Coulomb’s.
Electric Energy and Capacitance
We often draw two or more E field vectors at one point, when there are two or more charges causing the field. Each vector then represents the field that.
Physics 2112 Unit 4: Gauss’ Law
Chapter 22 Gauss’ Law.
Electricity So Far… AP Physics C. Coulomb’s Law and Electric Fields Due to Point Charges (Ch 21) The force between two electric charges which are motionless.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley PowerPoint ® Lecture prepared by Richard Wolfson Slide Electric.
Chapter 23 Electric Potential.
1 Lecture 3 Gauss’s Law Ch. 23 Physlet ch9_2_gauss/default.html Topics –Electric Flux –Gauss’
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 22 Gauss’s Law.
Electric Potential & Electric Potential Energy. Electric Potential Energy The electrostatic force is a conservative (=“path independent”) force The electrostatic.
Electrical Energy And Capacitance
Introduction: what do we want to get out of chapter 24?
د/ بديع عبدالحليم د/ بديع عبدالحليم
A metal box with no net charge is placed in an initially uniform E field, as shown. What is the total charge on the inner surface ? Assume this surface.
Physics 2102 Gauss’ law Physics 2102 Gabriela González Carl Friedrich Gauss
Phys. 122: Thursday, 01 Oct. HW 4 returned: please pick up yours in front. Mast. Phys.: Assign. 4 due this evening. Assign. 5 due in one week. Written.
Concepts 1. Coulomb ’ s law – direction and magnitude of force 2. Superposition – add forces (fields) vectorially Field lines & Flux 3. Gauss ’ law – application.
Chapter 25 Electric Potential. Electrical Potential Energy The electrostatic force is a conservative force, thus It is possible to define an electrical.
Oct. 4, From last time(s)… Work, energy, and (electric) potential Electric potential and charge Electric potential and electric field. Electric charges,
Gauss’ Law Chapter 23. Electric field vectors and field lines pierce an imaginary, spherical Gaussian surface that encloses a particle with charge +Q.
Ring Disk Last Time Infinite Plane + Two Infinite Planes FIELD OF RING ALONG AXIS +- FIELD OF DISK ALONG AXIS 1.
Physics 2102 Lecture: 06 MON 26 JAN 08
Unit 6: Electrostatics Concept Review
Question for the day Can the magnitude of the electric charge be calculated from the strength of the electric field it creates?
Quiz 1 (lecture 4) Ea
Chapter 23 Electric Potential.
Presentation transcript:

With insulators, you can often use Gauss’ law in combination with the principle of superposition. (PoS is that the field from two sources is the vector sum of the fields from each source.) Two examples: 1) Two infinite planes, one with charge density + , one with charge density - . 2) Subtractive superposition: a sphere with a spherical (off center!) void

What is the direction of the electric field at the point shown? A] NE B] SE C] NW D] SW E]it varies, depending on distances a & b

What is the magnitude of the electric field at the point shown? A] B] C] D] E] 0

Use extreme caution when applying Gauss’ law, when conductors are present. It is important not only that the “initial state” have sufficient symmetry, but also that the final state maintain the symmetry. For example, consider an infinite plane with initial charge density , and then add a point charge above it. If the plane is insulating, you can solve this problem. If the plane is conducting, you can’t solve this problem!

Electric Fields & Conductors (in statics…) No field in the conductor (or else charges would move) So, by Gauss’ law, no excess charge inside conductor (all excess charge is on surfaces) Field lines must contact the conductor perpendicularly The surface charge density is directly proportional to the field just outside the conductor (by Gauss’ law) E =  0

Let’s draw some field lines for a conducting plane with -Q total charge, and an external point charge of +Q & conducting shells with charges inside.

There still must be no field in the conductor. So the inner surface is still -Q. Thus, the outer surface will have +9Q, so that the total is 8Q (=+9Q - 1Q). Given the peanut shaped geometry and the fact that the charge +Q is off-center, is the charge density on the inner surface uniform (the same everywhere on that surface)? a] yes b] no

The negative charge on the inner surface will be concentrated close to the positive charge. (The E field next to the surface is stronger there !) If there is +9Q of charge on the outer surface, will the charge density on the outer surface be uniform? a] yes b] no

There is no electric field in the conductor. So the outside of the conductor cannot “know” that there is an off-center charge in the middle! So the charge density on the outer surface is uniform. a] yes

A metal box with no net charge is placed in an initially uniform E field, as shown. What is the total charge on the inner surface ? Assume this surface has area A. A] 0 B] C] D] E] cannot determine

No charge on the inner surface. What is the total charge on the outer surface? A] 0 B] C] D] E] cannot determine

No charge on the inner surface. Since the total charge is 0, there can be no net charge on the outer surface. What is the charge density on the left outer face of the box? Assume the external field is uniform, as shown. A] 0 B] C] D] E] cannot determine

What is the electric flux of the field through the rectangle in the xz plane between x=[0,L 1 ], z=[0,L 2 ] A] 0 B] L 1 2 L 2 C] larger than answer B D] smaller than answer B

What is the electric flux of the field through the half pipe shown: A] 0 B] L 1 2 L 2 C] larger than answer B D] smaller than answer B

What is the flux of the electric field through the surface shown? A] 0 B] C] D] E]

A point charge +Q is a distance d above an insulating sheet with charge density . What is the field at point P?

Insulating sheet: superposition of fields gives answer B. Suppose, instead, that a conducting sheet with charge density =  is brought from far away (far down, in the picture) to a distance d away from the charge +Q, then what is the field at P?

With a conducting sheet, the charge +Q will cause the charges to redistribute. Cannot determine! (Need Physics 400 level) Suppose, instead, that a conducting sheet with charge density = 0 is brought from far away (far down, in the picture) to a distance d away from the charge +Q, then what is the field at P?

In which case does the electric potential energy increase? ABAB Or C: both casesD: neither case

In which case does the electric potential energy increase? ABAB Or C: both casesD: neither case

Work done by electric force (source: fixed charges) on a test charge depends only on endpoints, not on path. (You can see this easily for a single fixed charge… it holds in general because of superposition.) Electric forces are “conservative” - We can define a potential energy. When a + charge moves “down the field”, the electric force does work on it, increasing its kinetic energy (or putting energy elsewhere). When a + charge moves “up the field”, it either loses kinetic energy, or some other force must push it up.

The electrical potential energy of a system of charges is the work necessary to assemble the charges from “infinity”. (For point charges, we take U=0 at infinity.) This will include all pairs of interactions. Two equal + charges are initially stationary and separated by r 0. If they are allowed to fly apart (to infinity), what will be the kinetic energy of each? A]B] C]D]

Three equal + charges are initially stationary and at the vertices of an equilateral triangle with side r 0. If they are allowed to fly apart (to infinity), what will be the kinetic energy of each? A]B] C]D]

Just as we can define electric field as the force felt by a test charge We define “potential” as potential energy of a test charge. Just as a conservative force is: (minus) the derivative of the potential energy The electric field is (minus) the derivative of the potential.

Eqiupotential surfaces

Equipotential surfaces are perpendicular to field lines In 2D pics, equipotentials look like lines, but they are surfaces.

Note: just because V=0 doesn’t mean E=0! A function can be zero but have a non-zero derivative. Also: it’s time to think in 3D. The derivative can be taken w.r.t x, y, or z. This means: hold y, z constant, so dy=dz=0 Note that E is a vector, but V is a scalar.

3 ways to calculate E fields A)Direct sum of sources, using Coulomb + Calculus (+ Components!) B)Gauss’ Law & Symmetry C)The negative of the derivative of the electric potential (if given) 2 Ways to calculate the electric potential A)The negative of the integral of the E field (if given) B)Sum of the sources, using Calculus if necessary Note: by sum of sources, I mean use the result from integrating the Coulomb field for a point source, V =

Last time, we found the potential from a ring of charge. Here’s another example of integrating over sources to find V: A line of charge.

Let’s find V by integrating E for a line of charge.

A perfectly insulating plane has charge density +2 C/m 2. What is the magnitude of the E field a distance x above the plane (in terms of x and    ? A]   B] 1/   C] 2/   D] 2    x F] 2/(x   

Where is the electrical potential higher? A] farther from the plane of positive charge B] closer to the plane of positive charge C] it’s the same everywhere, since the plane is infinite

The field is 1.13 x N/C, regardless of x. (Gauss) What is the magnitude of the difference in potential between a point in the plane and a point 10 m above the plane? A] 1.13 x V B] 1.13 x V C] 1.13 x 10 9 V D] 0 V E] potential difference does not exist in this problem since V ≠ 0 at infinity

Which graph could be the potential from an infinite plane of positive charge density, where x = distance from plane? E (none)