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In this lecture, J. Velkovska teaches how to determine the shape of electric fields and calculate electric flux through a surface using symmetry. Gauss's law is also used to calculate the electric field of symmetric charge distributions and understand the properties of conductors in electrostatic equilibrium. The lecture emphasizes the importance of symmetry in determining the electric field and demonstrates how to use Gauss's law to deduce the geometry of the charge distribution.
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PHYS117B: Lecture 4 • Last lecture: We used • Coulomb’s law • Principle of superposition • To find the electric field of continuous charge distributions • Today: I’m going to teach you the easy way! J.Velkovska
The key word is SYMMETRY J.Velkovska
We will: • Recognize and use symmetry to determine the shape of electric fields • Calculate electric flux through a surface • Use Gauss’s law to calculate the electric field of symmetric charge distributions • Use Gauss’s law to understand the properties of conductors in electrostatic equilibrium J.Velkovska
Suppose we know only 2 things about electric fields: • An electric field points away from + charges and towards negative charges • An electric field exerts a force on a charged particle What can we deduce for the electric field of an infinitely long charged cylinder ? J.Velkovska
The charge distribution has cylindrical symmetry • What does this mean ? • There is a group of geometrical transformations that do not cause any physical change • Let’s try it (I have a cylinder here) J.Velkovska
Translate, rotate, reflect J.Velkovska
If you can’t tell that the charge distribution (the cylinder) was transformed geometrically, then the electric field should not change either ! • The symmetry of the electric field MUST match the symmetry of the charge distribution! J.Velkovska
Can the electric field of the cylinder look like this ? NO : the reflection symmetry is not obeyed! J.Velkovska
Can the electric field of the cylinder look like this ? NO : the reflection symmetry is not obeyed! J.Velkovska
What about this situation? No: The translational symmetry is not obeyed! J.Velkovska
What about this situation ? Yes: Finally something that obeys symmetry ! J.Velkovska
Three basic symmetries: planar, cylindrical, spherical We will make heavy use of these three basic symmetries. J.Velkovska
We learned how to use symmetry to determine the direction of the electric field, if we know the geometry of the charge distribution. • Can we reverse the problem ? Can we use the symmetry of the electric field configuration to determine the geometry of the charge distribution that causes this field ? J.Velkovska
The mystery box Take a test charge, move it around, measure the force on it, figure out the field configuration => deduce the symmetry of the charge distribution inside J.Velkovska
Imagine a situation like this: No field around the box, or same “amount of field” going in and out J.Velkovska
Or you can have: Same box, same geometry of the field, but “more field” going out of the box J.Velkovska
We need some way to measure “how much” field goes in or out of the box • To measure the volume of water that passes through a loop per unit time, we use FLUX: the dot product of the velocity vector and the area vector gives volume/time J.Velkovska
We can define electric field flux: J.Velkovska
If the field is non-uniform: This is trouble, I need to do an integral J.Velkovska
The surface is NOT flat : ooh bother ! J.Velkovska
Relax ! We are going to deal with two EASY situations: the field is UNIFORM in both. The field is EVERYWHERE tangent the surface: FLUX = 0 ! The field is EVERYWHERE perpendicular to the surface: FLUX = EA J.Velkovska
What good is the electric field flux ?Gauss’s law gives a relation between the electric field flux through a closed surface and the charge that is enclosed in that surface. • From symmetry: determine the shape (direction in every point in space) of the electric field • From Gauss’s law: determine the magnitude of E J.Velkovska
What surface are we talking about ? • This is NOT a physical surface • It is an IMAGINARY surface • If we want to make life simple, we have to figure out what type of surface to choose, so that the integral in Gauss’s law is EASY to do • We need to choose a surface that has the same symmetry as the charge distribution • Then the field will be either tangent to the surface or perpendicular to the surface => no angles to deal with in the dot product! J.Velkovska
Let’s do it for an infinitely long wire with uniform linear charge density l • Last time we used Coulomb’s law: this is the HARD way • Today: or sweet simplicity – we’ll use Gauss’s law to get the same result ! J.Velkovska
Field of a line of charge: use Coulomb’s law, superposition and symmetry ! line of charge: length 2a and linear charge density l For an infinite line of charge i.e. x<< a J.Velkovska
See now how to do it using symmetry and Gauss’s law J.Velkovska