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Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field
27

Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Dec 14, 2015

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Moshe Drover
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Page 1: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Lecture 9

Applications ofGauss’s Law

Conductor in electric field

Page 2: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

ACT: Crossed planes

Which diagram corresponds to the E-field lines for these two uniformly charged infinite sheets that intersect each other as shown?

+y

+x

+y

+x

+y

+x

A B C

Page 3: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Each sheet produces a uniform electric field.

+x

+y

totalE

E

E

The total E field is uniform in each quadrant.

+y

+x

Page 4: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

EXAMPLE: Infinite line of charge

A cable of diameter D = 3 mm and length L = 200 m has a total charge Q = 4 C uniformly distributed along its length. Find the electric field at point P, located at a distance r = 2 cm from it.

r

P

L >> r → infinite cable

r >> D → one-dimensional charge distribution

Page 5: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Linear charge density:

QL

The elegant way (Gauss’s law)

r

P

h

The system has cylindrical symmetry.

The Gaussian surface should be a cylinder of radius r and height h.

Page 6: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

r

P

h

capscylinder side

E

caps 0

(caps are parallel to lines)E

cylinder side 2E rh

Linear charge density:

QL

enclosedq h

0

h

Page 7: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

r

P

h

0

2h

rhE

Linear charge density:

QL

02E

r

Page 8: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Example: Line and sheet

A. 0

B. 2.05 × 105 N/C

C. 4.10 × 105 N/C

D. 6.15 × 105 N/C

E. 9.25 × 105 N/C

Find the magnitude of the electric field half-way between an infinite line of uniform charge (λ = +10 μC/m) that runs parallel to an infinite sheet of uniform charge (σ = +10 μC/m2). The distance between the line and the sheet is d = 1.0 m.

λ = +10 μC/m

σ = +10 μC/m2

P d/2 d/2

Page 9: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

enclosed0 0

0 0

2

2 2

EAA

EA EQ A

A

2r

Electric field produced by an infinite sheet at distance r :

σ

Page 10: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

enclosed0 0

0 0

22

2 2

E rLL k

E rL EQ Lr r

Electric field produced by an infinite line at distance r:

L

Page 11: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

λ = +10 μC/m

σ = +10 μC/m2

P d/2 d/2

Esheet Eline

sheet0

line

2

2

E

kE r

r

P line sheet

0 0

0

5

( )2

2

1

2

2.05 10 N/ C

dE E E

d

d

(Answer B)

Page 12: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Charge in a conductor

We know that E = 0 inside a conductor in equilibrium. Therefore, the electric flux though any Gaussian surface inside the conductor is zero.

There is no charge inside the conductor.

The charge enclosed by these surfaces is zero.

The charge in a conductor in equilibrium is always on the surface(s).

Page 13: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Second application of Gauss’s Law:

Finding the charge distribution when E is known.

Page 14: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Example: Conducting shell

A solid non-conducting sphere with a total charge Q = +3 μC is surrounded by a concentric uncharged conducting spherical shell.What is the surface charge density σin on the inner surface of the shell?

σoutσin

Q

Page 15: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

σoutσin

Q

Negative charges are attracted towards the inner surface and positive charges are repelled towards the outer surface.

Page 16: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

σoutσin

Q

Draw a Gaussian surface inside the conducting shell.

0 ( 0 inside a conductor)E da E

Q +Qin

=0

Qin

=−QRin

=q

enclosed

0

=Q +Q

in

0

Page 17: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

Charge on the outer surface:

Net charge on the shell is zero: Q

out+Q

in=0

Q

out=−Q

in=Q

Q-Q

Q

The charge enclosed by the pink surface must be zero.

Page 18: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

If the metal shell had a total charge of 3Q :

4Q-Q

Q

If the metal shell had a total charge of 3Q and the central charge was 100Q :

103Q-100Q

100Q

The charge enclosed by the pink surface must be zero.

Page 19: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

ACT: Conducting shell

We now remove the uncharged shell. Compare the magnitude of the electric field at point P before and after the shell is removed.

A. Ebefore < Eafter

B. Ebefore = Eafter

C. Ebefore > Eafter

σoutσin

Q

P

σin

Q

Page 20: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

σoutσin

Q

P

In both cases, the symmetry is the same. We will use the same Gaussian surface: A sphere that contains point P.

And the enclosed charge is also the same: Q.

Therefore,

2P

0

20 P

4

14

QE r

QE

r

2P4E r So the integral will look just the same:

Page 21: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

ACT: Asymmetric conducting shell

This time keep the shell, but move the internal charge off center. Compare the electric field at point P when the charge is centered/off center.

A. Ecentered < Eoff-center

B. Ecentered = Eoff-center

C. Ecentered > Eoff-center Q

P

Q

P

Page 22: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

QQ

Charge distribution on inner surface:

Uniform Concentrated near the sphere

But E = 0 inside the

shell in both cases!

Outer surface charge is

uniform (Why wouldn’t it?)

E is the same for both (that of a

sphere with uniform charge

Q)

Flux through pink surface =

0

-Q -Q

Total charge on inner surface is always -Q.

QQ

Total charge on outer surface is always Q.

Page 23: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.
Page 24: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

ACT: Parallel charged planes II

An uncharged metal slab is inserted between the two planes as shown below. Charge densities σL and σR appear on the sides of the slab. Compare the electric field at point P before and after the slab is introduced.

A. Ebefore < Eafter B. Ebefore = Eafter C. Ebefore > Eafter

P

σL σR

σL + σR = 0and distance from the plane does not matter!

σ2 = -2 μC/m2σ1 = +4 μC/m2

Page 25: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

P

σL σR

How can we determine σL and σR?

σ1

σ2

The slab surfaces are two new charged planes. There are 4 contributions to the field inside the slab

1

02

2

02

L

02

R

02

Note: σ2 < 0, so that contribution really points in the opposite direction, but it’s easier to leave signs for the end.

Page 26: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

P

σL σRσ1

σ2

• The net field inside the conducting slab is zero:

1

02

2

02

L

02

R

02

L R1 2

0 0 0 0

02 2 2 2

E

Page 27: Lecture 9 Applications of Gauss’s Law Conductor in electric field.

1 L R 2

L R

0

0

1 L 22 0

R L

2 1

L 2

1 2

R 2