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Lecture 2

Chapter 22 of PHYS 102 focuses on electricity and magnetism, specifically Gauss's law, which relates electric flux through a closed surface to the charge enclosed. It explains how to calculate electric flux, the effects of charge distribution, and the implications for conductors in electrostatic situations. The chapter also covers applications of Gauss's law, including electrostatic shielding and the behavior of electric fields around conductors.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views44 pages

Lecture 2

Chapter 22 of PHYS 102 focuses on electricity and magnetism, specifically Gauss's law, which relates electric flux through a closed surface to the charge enclosed. It explains how to calculate electric flux, the effects of charge distribution, and the implications for conductors in electrostatic situations. The chapter also covers applications of Gauss's law, including electrostatic shielding and the behavior of electric fields around conductors.

Uploaded by

seymennebi087
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PHYS 102– Electricity

and Magnetism
Chapter 22

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Learning Goals for Chapter 22
Looking forward at …
• how you can determine the amount of charge within a closed surface by
examining the electric field on the surface.
• what is meant by electric flux, and how to calculate it.
• how Gauss’s law relates the electric flux through a closed surface to the
charge enclosed by the surface.
• how to use Gauss’s law to calculate the electric field due to a symmetric
charge distribution.
• where the charge is located on a charged conductor.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Introduction
• This child acquires an electric
charge by touching the
charged metal shell.
• The charged hairs on the
child’s head repel and stand
out.

• What would happen if the child stood inside a large, charged metal shell?
• Symmetry properties play an important role in physics.
• Gauss’s law will allow us to do electric-field calculations using symmetry
principles.

Altınbaş Üniversitesi
Asst. Prof. Dr. Ahad ARDABILI [email protected] PHYS 102
What is Gauss’s law all about?
• Given any general distribution of charge, we surround it with an imaginary
surface that encloses the charge.
• Then we look at the electric field at various points on this imaginary surface.
• Gauss’s law is a relationship between the field at all the points on the
surface and the total charge enclosed within the surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Charge and electric flux
• In both boxes below, there is a positive charge within the box, which
produces an outward pointing electric flux through the surface of the box.
• The field patterns on the surfaces of the boxes are different in detail, since
the box on the left contains one point charge, and the box on the right
contains two.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Charge and electric flux
• When there are negative charges inside the box, there is an inward pointing
electric flux on the surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Zero net charge inside a box: Case 1 of 3
• What happens if there is zero charge inside the box?
• If the box is empty and the electric field is zero everywhere, then there is no
electric flux into or out of the box.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Zero net charge inside a box: Case 2 of 3
• What happens if there is zero net charge inside the box?
• There is an electric field, but it “flows into” the box on half of its surface and
“flows out of” the box on the other half.
• Hence there is no net
electric flux into or out
of the box.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Zero net charge inside a box: Case 3 of 3
• What happens if there is charge near the box, but not
inside it?
• On one end of the box, the flux points into the box; on the opposite end,
the flux points out of the box; and on the sides, the field is parallel to the
surface and so the flux is zero.
• The net electric flux
through the box is zero.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


What affects the flux through a box?
• The net electric flux is directly proportional to the net amount of charge
enclosed within the surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


What affects the flux through a box?
• The net electric flux is independent of the size of the closed surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


To summarize:

• 1. Whether there is a net outward or inward electric flux through a closed
surface depends on the sign of the enclosed charge.
• 2. Charges outside the surface do not give a net electric flux through the
surface.
• 3. The net electric flux is directly proportional to the net amount of charge
enclosed within the surface but is otherwise independent of the size of the
closed surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.
Calculating electric flux
• Consider a flat area perpendicular to a uniform electric field.
• Increasing the area means that more electric field lines pass through the
area, increasing
the flux.
• A stronger field means more
closely spaced lines, and
therefore more flux.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Calculating electric flux
• If the area is not perpendicular to the field, then fewer field lines pass
through it.
• In this case the area that
counts is the
silhouette (siluet , gölge)area
that we see when looking in
the direction of the field.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Calculating electric flux
• If the area is edge-on to the field, then the area is perpendicular to the field
and the flux is zero.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Flux of a nonuniform electric field
• What happens if the electric field isn’t uniform but varies from point to
point over the area A ?
• In general, the flux through a surface must be computed using a surface
integral over the area:

• The SI unit for electric flux is 1 N ∙ m2/C.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Example

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Solution

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.
Gauss’s law
• Carl Friedrich Gauss helped develop several branches of mathematics,
including differential geometry, real analysis, and number theory.
• The “bell curve” of statistics is one of his inventions.
• Gauss also made state-of-the-art
investigations of the earth’s
magnetism and calculated the orbit
of the first asteroid to be discovered.
• While completely equivalent to
Coulomb’s law, Gauss’s law
provides a different way to express
the relationship between electric
charge and electric field.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Point charge centered in a spherical surface
• Shown is the projection of an element
of area dA of a sphere of radius R onto a
concentric sphere of radius 2R.
• The area element on the larger sphere
is 4 dA, but the electric field magnitude
is ¼ as great on the sphere of radius 2R
as on the sphere of radius R.
• Hence the electric flux is the same for
both areas and is independent of the
radius of the sphere.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Point charge inside a nonspherical surface
• As before, the flux is independent of the surface and depends only on the
charge inside.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Gauss’s law in a vacuum
• For a closed surface enclosing no charge:

• The figure shows a point charge outside a closed surface that encloses no
charge.
• If an electric field line from the
external charge enters the
surface at one point, it must
leave at another.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


General form of Gauss’s law
• Let Qencl be the total charge enclosed by a surface.
• Gauss’s law states that the total electric flux through a closed surface is
equal to the total (net) electric charge inside the surface, divided by

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Positive and negative flux
• In the case of a single point charge at the center of a spherical surface,
Gauss’s law follows simply from Coulomb’s law.
• A surface around a positive charge has a positive (outward) flux, and a
surface around a negative charge has a negative (inward) flux.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


positive charge

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Negative charge

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Applications of Gauss’s law
• Without having to do any integration, we can use Gauss’s law to determine
the electric flux through the closed surfaces in the diagram.
• What are the electric flux through the closed surfaces?

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Electric field inside a conductor (Reminder Ch.21)
• In some situations the magnitude and direction of the field (and hence its
vector components) have the same values everywhere throughout a certain
region; we then say that the field is uniform in this region.
• If there is an electric field within a conductor, the field exerts a force on
every charge in the conductor, giving the free charges a net motion. By
definition an electrostatic situation is one in which the charges have no net
motion. We conclude that in electrostatics the electric field at every point
within the material of conductor must be zero.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Field of a charged conducting sphere

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Applications of Gauss’s law
• Suppose we construct a Gaussian surface inside a conductor.
• Because = 0 everywhere on this surface, Gauss’s law requires that the
net charge inside the surface is zero.
• Under electrostatic conditions
(charges not in motion), any
excess charge on a solid
conductor resides entirely on
the conductor’s surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Charges on conductors
• Consider a solid conductor with a hollow cavity inside.
• If there is no charge within the cavity, we can use a Gaussian surface such as
A to show that the net charge on the surface of the cavity must be zero,
because = 0 everywhere on the
Gaussian surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Charges on conductors
• Suppose we place a small body with a charge q inside a cavity within a
conductor. The conductor is uncharged and is insulated from the charge q.
• According to Gauss’s law the total there must be a charge −q distributed on
the surface of the cavity, drawn there by the charge q inside the cavity.
• The total charge on the
conductor must remain zero,
so a charge +q must appear
on its outer surface.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Faraday’s icepail experiment: Slide 1 of 3
• We now consider Faraday’s historic icepail experiment.
• We mount a conducting container on an insulating stand.
• The container is initially uncharged.
• Then we hang a charged metal
ball from an insulating thread,
and lower it into the container.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Faraday’s icepail experiment: Slide 2 of 3
• We lower the ball into the container, and put the lid on.
• Charges are induced on the walls of the container, as shown.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Faraday’s icepail experiment: Slide 3 of 3
• We now let the ball touch the inner wall.
• The surface of the ball becomes part of the cavity surface, thus, according to
Gauss’s law, the ball must lose all its charge.
• Finally, we pull the ball out;
we find that it has indeed lost
all its charge.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Electrostatic shielding
• A conducting box is immersed in a uniform electric field.
• The field of the induced charges on the box combines with the uniform field
to give zero total field inside the box.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Electrostatic shielding
• Suppose we have an object that we want to protect from electric fields.
• We surround the object with a conducting box, called a Faraday cage.
• Little to no electric field
can penetrate inside the
box.
• The person in the
photograph is protected
from the powerful
electric discharge.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Field at the surface of a conductor
• Gauss’s law can be used to show that
the direction of the electric field at the
surface of any conductor is always
perpendicular to the surface.
• The magnitude of the electric field just
outside a charged conductor is
proportional to the surface charge
density σ.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


Electric charge is distributed uniformly along an infinitely long, thin wire. The charge per unit length is (assumed
positive). Find the electric field using Gauss’s law.

© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.


© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.
© 2016 Pearson Education, Ltd.

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