EE-311 Ch3 HW Solutions

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 5

EE-311 Ch3 HW Solutions

Solution 3.4

An electric field in free space is E = (5z 3 /  0 ) aˆ z V/m. Find the total charge contained
within a sphere of 3-m radius, centered at the origin. Using Gauss' law, we set up the
integral in free space over the sphere surface, whose outward unit normal is ar :
2 
  0E  n da = 
Q=Ñ  0 5z a z  a r (3)2 sin  d d
3
0

where in this case z = 3cos and (in all cases) a z  ar = cos . These are substituted to
yield
 1
Q = 2  5(3)5 cos 4  sin  d = −2 (5)(3)5   cos5  |02 = 972
0
5

Solution 3.5

Let D = 4 xya x + 2( x2 + z 2 )a y + 4 yza z C/m2 and evaluate surface integrals to find the total
charge enclosed in the rectangular parallelepiped 0  x  2 , 0  y  3 , 0  z  5 m: Of the
6 surfaces to consider, only 2 will contribute to the net outward flux. Why? First consider
the planes at y = 0 and 3. The y component of D will penetrate those surfaces, but will
be inward at y = 0 and outward at y = 3 , while having the same magnitude in both cases.
These fluxes will thus cancel. At the x = 0 plane, Dx = 0 and at the z = 0 plane, Dz = 0 ,
so there will be no flux contributions from these surfaces. This leaves the 2 remaining
surfaces at x = 2 and z = 5 . The net outward flux becomes:

5 3 3 2
=
0 0
D |x = 2 a x dy dz +   D |z =5 a z dx dy
0 0
3 3
= 5 4(2) y dy + 2 4(5) y dy = 360 C
0 0

Solution 3.9

A uniform volume charge density of 80  C/m3 is present throughout the region


8mm  r  10mm . Let v = 0 for 0  r  8mm .

a) Find the total charge inside the spherical surface r = 10 mm: This will be

Hayt/Buck, Engineering Electromagnetics, 8/e. ©2012. The McGraw-Hill Companies


2  .010 r 3 .010
Q=  0  .008 (80  10−6 )r 2 sin  dr d d = 4  (80  10−6 ) |.008
0 3
= 1.64  10−10 C = 164 pC

b) Find Dr at r = 10 mm: Using a spherical Gaussian surface at r = 10 , Gauss’ law is


written as 4 r 2 Dr = Q = 164 10−12 , or

164  10−12
Dr (10mm) = = 1.30  10−7 C/m 2 = 130nC/m 2
4 (.01)2
c) If there is no charge for r  10 mm, find Dr at r = 20 mm: This will be the same
computation as in part b , except the gaussian surface now lies at 20 mm. Thus
164  10−12
Dr (20mm) = = 3.25  10−8 C/m 2 = 32.5nC/m 2
4 (.02) 2

Solution 3.13

Spherical surfaces at r = 2, 4, and 6 m carry uniform surface charge densities of


20 nC/m2 , −4nC/m2 , and  s 0 , respectively.

a) Find D at r = 1, 3and5 m: Noting that the charges are spherically-symmetric, we


ascertain that D will be radially-directed and will vary only with radius. Thus, we
apply Gauss’ law to spherical shells in the following regions: r  2 : Here, no
charge is enclosed, and so Dr = 0 .

80  10−9
2  r  4 : 4 r 2 Dr = 4 (2) 2 (20  10−9 )  Dr = C/m 2
r2

So Dr (r = 3) = 8.9 10−9 C/m2 .

16  10−9
4  r  6 : 4 r 2 Dr = 4 (2) 2 (20  10−9 ) + 4 (4) 2 ( −4  10 −9 )  Dr =
r2

So Dr (r = 5) = 6.4  10−10 C/m2 .

b) Determine  s 0 such that D = 0 at r = 7 m. Since fields will decrease as 1/ r 2 , the


question could be re-phrased to ask for  s 0 such that D = 0 at all points where
r  6 m. In this region, the total field will be
16  10−9  s 0 (6) 2
Dr (r  6) = +
r2 r2

Requiring this to be zero, we find  s 0 = −(4 / 9)  10−9 C/m2 .

Hayt/Buck, Engineering Electromagnetics, 8/e. ©2012. The McGraw-Hill Companies


Solution 3.16

An electric flux density is given by D = D0 a  , where D0 is a given constant.

a) What charge density generates this field? Charge density is found by taking the
divergence: With radial D only, we have
1 d D
v =   D = (  D0 ) = 0 C/m3
 d 
b) For the specified field, what total charge is contained within a cylinder of radius
a and height b , where the cylinder axis is the z axis? We can either integrate the
charge density over the specified volume, or integrate D over the surface that
contains the specified volume:
b 2 a D0 b 2
Q=
0 0  0
 d  d dz =   D0 a   a  a d dz = 2 abD0 C
 0 0

Solution 3.17

A cube is defined by 1  x, y, z  1.2 . If D = 2 x 2 ya x + 3x 2 y 2a y C/m2 :


a) apply Gauss’ law to find the total flux leaving the closed surface of the cube. We
call the surfaces at x = 1.2 and x = 1 the front and back surfaces respectively,
those at y = 1.2 and y = 1 the right and left surfaces, and those at z = 1.2 and z = 1
the top and bottom surfaces. To evaluate the total charge, we integrate D  n over
all six surfaces and sum the results. We note that there is no z component of D ,
so there will be no outward flux contributions from the top and bottom surfaces.
The fluxes through the remaining four are
1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2
 D  n da = 11 414 42(1.2)
=Q=Ñ
2 4 4 4 3 1 1 4 14 4 2 4 4 4 3
y dy dz + − 2(1)2 y dy dz
2

front back
1.2 1.2 1.2 1.2
+   − 3x (1) dx dz +   3x (1.2) dx dz = 0.1028C
2 2 2 2
11 4 14 4 2 4 4 4 3 11 4 14 4 2 4 4 4 3
left right

b) evaluate   D at the center of the cube: This is


  D =  4 xy + 6 x 2 y  = 4(1.1)2 + 6(1.1)3 = 12.83
(1.1,1.1)

c) Estimate the total charge enclosed within the cube by using Eq. (8): This is
Q B   D |center v = 12.83  (0.2)3 = 0.1026 Close!

Hayt/Buck, Engineering Electromagnetics, 8/e. ©2012. The McGraw-Hill Companies


Solution 3.19

A spherical surface of radius 3 mm is centered at P(4,1,5) in free space. Let


D = xa x C/m2 . Use the results of Sec. 3.4 to estimate the net electric flux leaving the
spherical surface: We use  B   Dv , where in this case   D = ( / x) x = 1C/m3 . Thus
4
 B  (.003)3 (1) = 1.13  10−7 C = 113nC
3

Solution 3.25

Within the spherical shell, 3  r  4 m, the electric flux density is given as


D = 5(r − 3)3 ar C/m2

a) What is the volume charge density at r = 4 ? In this case we have


1 d 2 5
v =   D = 2
(r Dr ) = (r − 3) 2 (5r − 6) C/m3
r dr r

which we evaluate at r = 4 to find v (r = 4) = 17.50 C/m3 .

b) What is the electric flux density at r = 4 ? Substitute r = 4 into the given


expression to find D(4) = 5 ar C/m2

c) How much electric flux leaves the sphere r = 4 ? Using the result of part b , this
will be  = 4 (4)2 (5) = 320 C

d) How much charge is contained within the sphere, r = 4 ? From Gauss’ law, this
will be the same as the outward flux, or again, Q = 320 C .

Solution 3.29

In the region of free space that includes the volume 2  x, y, z  3 ,


2
D= 2
( yz a x + xz a y − 2 xy a z ) C/m 2
z

a) Evaluate the volume integral side of the divergence theorem for the volume
defined above: In cartesian, we find   D = 8xy / z 3 . The volume integral side is
now

Hayt/Buck, Engineering Electromagnetics, 8/e. ©2012. The McGraw-Hill Companies


3 3 3 8 xy 1 1
 vol  D dv =  2 2 2 z 3
dxdydz = (9 − 4)(9 − 4)  −  = 3.47 C
4 9
b) Evaluate the surface integral side for the corresponding closed surface: We call
the surfaces at x = 3 and x = 2 the front and back surfaces respectively, those at
y = 3 and y = 2 the right and left surfaces, and those at z = 3 and z = 2 the top
and bottom surfaces. To evaluate the surface integral side, we integrate D  n over
all six surfaces and sum the results. Note that since the x component of D does
not vary with x , the outward fluxes from the front and back surfaces will cancel
each other. The same is true for the left and right surfaces, since D y does not vary
with y . This leaves only the top and bottom surfaces, where the fluxes are:
3 3−4 xy 3 3 −4 xy 1 1
 D  dS =  2 2
Ñ 2
dxdy −  
2 2 2
dxdy = (9 − 4)(9 − 4)  −  = 3.47 C
4 9
1 4 4 23 4 4 3 1 4 4 22 4 4 3
top bottom

Hayt/Buck, Engineering Electromagnetics, 8/e. ©2012. The McGraw-Hill Companies

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy