Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Electric Flux PH 203 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 4
2
HW 3, #1, HRW7, P 9 q 2 = - 4.50 q 1 at x 2 = 70 cm and q 1 = 2.1 10 -8 C at x 1 = 20 cm, where is E = 0? +q 1 -q 2 q 2 > q 1 r 2 < r 1 so E 2 > E 1 E 2 and E 1 both point right
3
HW 3, #1, HRW7, P 9 q 2 = - 4.50 q 1 at x 2 = 70 cm and q 1 = 2.1 10 -8 C at x 1 = 20 cm, where is E = 0? E 2 = E 1 at position x (1/4 0 )((q 1 /(x-x 1 ) 2 )=(1/4 0 )((q 2 /(x-x 2 ) 2 ) q 2 /q 1 = (x-x 2 ) 2 /(x-x 1 ) 2 (q 2 /q 1 )½ =(x-x 2 ) 2 /(x-x 1 ) 2 ±2.12 = (x-70)/(x-20) x-70 = ±2.12(x-20) x = 36cm and -24.6cm Only -24.6 cm will work
4
Flux If many field lines pass through a given area the forces there are strong flux = EA This is only true if the field in perpendicular to the area E and A are actually vectors with the direction of A defined as the line normal to the surface
5
Finding Flux Flux = EA cos The maximum flux occurs when the field is directly perpendicular to the surface: = 0, Flux = EA = 90, Flux = 0 For a closed area: If the field lines leave, the sign is positive If the field lines enter, the sign is negative
6
Defining the Flux For a real surface, we divide it into a large number of very small surfaces of area dA = ∫ E dA Which is a closed path integral over the entire surface The units of flux are (N m 2 / C)
7
Types of Fields Generated by an unknown agency and occupying some specific space Real fields are generated by charges What is the flux associated with real charges?
8
Flux of a Single Charge For a sphere of radius r with a charge q at its center, the field is perpendicular to the surface everywhere (cos = 1) = ∫ E dA = EA = (1/4 0 )(q/r 2 )(4 r 2 ) = q/ 0 Thus, for a sphere around a point charge: = q/ 0
9
Gauss’s Law We can use Gauss’s Law, which states: = q/ 0 (for any surface) For a positive charge the flux is positive (leave the surface) for a negative charge the flux is negative (enter the surface)
10
Using Gauss’s Law We can use Gauss’s Law to relate the field to the charge: 0 ∫ E dA = q Note that if the net flux is outward, the net charge is positive and if the net flux is inward the net charge is negative
11
Gauss Notes The shape of the surface does not matter Charges outside the surface do not matter Other stuff does not matter The flux just depends on the net enclosed charge = (q 1 + q 2 + q 3 ) / 0
12
Next Time Read 23.5-23.9 Problems: Ch 23, P: 6, 9, 22, 31, 44
13
What direction will the dipoles rotate in? A)1 and 2 clockwise, 3 and 4 counterclockwise B)1 and 2 counterclockwise, 3 and 4 clockwise C)1 and 3 clockwise, 2 and 4 counterclockwise D)1 and 3 counterclockwise, 2 and 4 clockwise E)All clockwise
14
The field very far from a dipole : The field very far from a charged ring A)zero : zero B)like a point charge : like a point charge C)zero : like a point charge D)like a point charge : zero E)Neither reduce to a simple expression
15
If you turn a dipole from orientation 1 to orientation 2, the work you do is A)positive B)negative C)zero D)the sign depends on the magnitude of q E)the sign depends on the magnitude of E
16
If you turn a dipole from orientation 1 to orientation 4, how does the net work compare to the previous situation? A)it is greater B)it is less C)it is the same D)it depends on the magnitude of q E)it depends on the magnitude of E
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.