Chapter 5 - Electric Fields
Chapter 5 - Electric Fields
UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY
GENERAL PHYSICS 1
Dr. Pham Thi Hai Mien
Department of Applied Physics
Faculty of Applied Science
CHAPTER 5. ELECTRIC FIELDS
1. ELECTRIC CHARGE
2. COULOMB’S LAW
3. THE ELECTRIC FIELD
3.1. The Electric Field Due to a Point Charge
3.2. Electric Field of a Continuous Charge Distribution
4. GAUSS'S LAW
5. ELECTRIC POTENTIAL
5.1. Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy
5.2. Electric Potential Due to Point Charges
5.3. Electric Potential Due to a Continuous Charge Distribution
5.4. Electric Potential Due to a Charged Conductor
5.5. Calculating the Field from the Potential
1. ELECTRIC CHARGE
F
E (N/C or V/m) (1)
q0
0.5
0.4
E y E1 y E2 y E1 E2 sin (3.9 105 ) (1.8 105 )( ) 2.5 105 N / C
0.5
E Ex i E y j 1.1 105 i 2.5 105 j N / C
3.2. ELECTRIC FIELD
OF A CONTINUOUS CHARGE DISTRIBUTION
• To evaluate the electric field created by a
continuous charge distribution, we use the
following procedure:
Divide the charge distribution into small
elements, each of which contains a small
charge dq.
Calculate the electric field due to one of these elements at a point P:
dq
dE k 2 r
r
Evaluate the total electric field at P by applying the superposition
principle):
dq
E dE k 2 r
r
• If the charge is non-uniformly distributed over a volume, surface, or
line, the amounts of charge in a small volume, surface, or length
element are charge density:
dq
Volume charge density: [C / m3 ]
dV
dq
Surface charge density: [C / m 2 ]
dS
dq
Linear charge density: [C / m]
d
q q q
• If the charge is uniformly distributed: , ,
V S L
SAMPLE PROBLEM 3
A rod of length L, has a uniform positive charge per unit length and a
total charge Q. Calculate the electric field at a point M that is located
along the long axis of the rod and a distance d from one end.
SOLUTION
• Assume that the rod is lying along
the x axis, that dx is the length of
one small segment, and that dq is
the charge on that segment.
• The field dE at point M due to this segment:
dq dx
dE k 2 k
L d x
2
r
• The total field at point M due to all segments of the rod:
dx 1 1 Q1 1
L
E dE k k k
2
0 L d x d L d L d L d
4. GAUSS'S LAW
• Electric flux E is the number of electric field lines that pass through
a surface:
E EdS EdSn
S S
dS
q
EdS i
S
0
Closed surfaces of various
• Gauss’s law is useful in determining shapes surrounding a charge q.
electric fields when the charge distribution The net electric flux is the same
through all surfaces.
is characterized by a high degree of
symmetry such as spherical, cylindrical, or
planar symmetry.
SAMPLE PROBLEM 4
A thin spherical shell of radius R has a total charge Q distributed
uniformly over its surface. Find the electric field at points outside and
inside the shell.
SOLUTION
• Construct 2 spherical gaussian surfaces
concentric with the shell: S2 encloses the shell,
and S1 encloses only the empty interior of the
shell.
• Apply Gauss’ law to surface S2:
q q
2 E 2 dS E 2 dS E 2 dS E 2S
(S2 )
0 (S2 ) (S)
0
q q
4r E 2 E 2
2
0 4 0 r 2
q
• Apply Gauss’ law to surface S1: 1 (S ) E1dS 0 0 E1 0
1
THE ELECTRIC FIELD OF
SYMMETRIC UNIFORM CHARGE DISTRIBUTIONS
1. A charged rod
1 1
E M k ex
d Ld
2k
EN sin ey
h
2k
If the rod is infinite (α = 900 ): EN ey
h
2. A charged arc
2k
EO sin e y
R 2
A charged circle (α = 3600 ): E O 0
3. A charged disk
h
EM 1 2 ey
20 h R2
E
2 0
5. A thin, uniformly charged spherical shell
0 rR
E q R 2 1
k r 2 r 2 rR
0
kq
R 3 r 3 r rR
E
0
k q R 3
1
rR
r 2 3 0 r 2
7. A charged cylinder of infinite length
0 rR
E 2k
rR
r
2 r rR
E 2
0
R 1 rR
2 0 r
5. ELECTRIC POTENTIAL
5.1. ELECTRIC POTENTIAL AND ELECTRIC POTENTIAL ENERGY
• When a test charge q0 is placed in an electric field, the charge–field
system has an electric potential energy U.
• The work done by the electric field on the charge from point A to
point B is: B B B
W dW Fdr = q 0 Edr
A A A
SOLUTION
• Because the spheres are connected by a conducting
wire, they must both be at the same electric potential:
q1 q2 q1 r1
V1 V2 k k
r1 r2 q 2 r2
• The electric fields at their surfaces:
q1 q2 E1 r22 q1 r2
E1 k 2 , E 2 k 2 2
r1 r2 E 2 r1 q 2 r1
SAMPLE PROBLEM 7
A solid sphere of radius a = 2.00 cm is concentric with a spherical
conducting shell of inner radius b = 2.00a and outer radius c = 2.40a.
The sphere has a net uniform positive charge +Q; the shell has a net
charge -2Q. Find the electric field in the regions 1 (r<a), 2 (a<r<b), 3
(b<r<c) and 4 (r>c)?
SOLUTION
Qr
Region (1) r a : Ek 3
a
Q
Region (2) a r b : E k 2
r
Region (3) b r c : E 0
Q
Region (4) r c : Ek 2
r
5.5. CALCULATING THE FIELD FROM THE POTENTIAL
• The relation between electric field and electric potential:
B
VB VA Edr
A
V V V
or E gradV E x i E y j E z k i j k
x y z
if we know the function V(x, y, z) for all points in the region around
a charge distribution, we can find the components of E at any point
by taking partial derivatives of V(x, y, z).
V
• If the electric field is uniform: E
r
ELECTRIC DIPOLE
• An electric dipole consists of two charges of equal magnitude q and
opposite sign separated by a distance d. For example: molecules HCl.
• An electric dipole has an electric dipole moment pe qd directed
from –q toward +q.
• If we place an electric dipole in a uniform electric field at the initial
angle α between p e and E , then:
The electric forces acting on –q and +q:
F qE; F qE
The net torque due to the electric forces
makes the dipole rotate until the dipole
moment points in the direction of the
electric field:
d
d
OA F OB F qE
qE qd E p e E
2 2
2
The work done by the electric field: W 2p e E sin
2
REFERENCES