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Electric and Magnetic Fields

This document contains 4 questions regarding electric and magnetic fields. Question 1 involves calculating the electric flux and enclosed charge for cylindrical and spherical boxes half buried in soil. Question 2 involves calculating the electric field inside and outside a uniformly charged plastic rod. Question 3 involves determining the charge density, radius, and total charge of a spherical charge distribution based on electric field measurements at two distances. Question 4 involves calculating the electric field due to an exponentially varying charge density model of the proton.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views2 pages

Electric and Magnetic Fields

This document contains 4 questions regarding electric and magnetic fields. Question 1 involves calculating the electric flux and enclosed charge for cylindrical and spherical boxes half buried in soil. Question 2 involves calculating the electric field inside and outside a uniformly charged plastic rod. Question 3 involves determining the charge density, radius, and total charge of a spherical charge distribution based on electric field measurements at two distances. Question 4 involves calculating the electric field due to an exponentially varying charge density model of the proton.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Electric and Magnetic Fields

ELECTRIC AND MAGNETIC FIELDS



ASSIGNMENT 3

Note: Questions 1 - 3 count for 95% of the marks, and question 4 for 5%.

Q1 The Earth's electric field points vertically downwards with
E =80 N C
-1
. A non-conducting cylindrical box with radius
4m is half buried in the ground (and so half filled with soil)
as shown. Regard the soil as a perfect conductor.

(i) What is the total electric flux through the box?

(ii) What is the total electric charge enclosed by
the box? Where is this charge located?

(iii) What are the answers to (i) and (ii) for a
spherical box of the same radius, half buried in the ground?

Q2 A long plastic rod has radius a and carries electric charge uniformly distributed within it. The charge
contained in a 1-metre length is .

(a) Draw side-view and axial-view diagrams showing the rod and the electric field pattern.

(b) Use Gauss's law to find the magnitude of the electric field for two regions
(i) r <a, and (ii) r >a.

(c) Find the total electric flux through a co-axial cylindrical surface of radius a/2 and
length 5 m.

Q3 For a sphere of radius R containing uniform charge density (charge per unit volume) of , the
magnitude of the electric field, E, at a distance r from the centre is given by

E
r
for r R E
R
r
for r R = =


3 3
0
3
0
2
< > (derived in lectures).

(i) Sketch the variation of E with radial distance.
(ii) For a particular sphere of charge, of radius R, the following measurements are made:

r =10 mm, E =3.77 x 10
5
N C
-1
r =40 mm, E =1.88 x 10
5
N C
-1
.

Determine: (a) The charge density, (b) The radius, R (c) The total charge, Q

Hint: There are three possibilities: both points inside the sphere; one inside and one outside;
or both outside. A thorough answer should explain why only one of these possibilities is
consistent with the information given.

E
3m

Continued on other side
Electric and Magnetic Fields

Q4 The electric charge of the proton is modelled as an exponentially varying charge density


3
3
m C
b
r
Exp
b 8
e

(

= where b =2.3 x 10
-16
m.


(i) Use Gauss's law to show that the magnitude of the electric field as a function of radial distance is
given by

E
e
r
r
b
Exp
r
b
r
b
Exp
r
b
r
=
|
\

|
.
| +
|
\

|
.
|
|
\

|
.
|

(
8
2 2 1
0
2
2
2

.


(ii) Calculate E at r =7x 10
-16
m. How does this compare to the field due to a point charge at the
central position?

Note: You will need to use the following standard integral:

x e x e e x
x x x 2 2
2 1

= + ( )

Hint: Apply the step-by-step procedure for using Gauss's law. The only non-trivial bit is
determining how much charge is inside the Gaussian surface.

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