EE-311 Ch3 HW Solutions
EE-311 Ch3 HW Solutions
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) Find the total charge inside the spherical surface r = 10 mm: This will be
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
80 10−9
2 r 4 : 4 r 2 Dr = 4 (2) 2 (20 10−9 ) Dr = C/m 2
r2
16 10−9
4 r 6 : 4 r 2 Dr = 4 (2) 2 (20 10−9 ) + 4 (4) 2 ( −4 10 −9 ) Dr =
r2
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
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
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!
Solution 3.25
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
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