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Tuesday, 28 June 2016 Overview • Continuous Charge distributions • • • • Finish up line of charge Ring of charge Disk of Charge Sphere of charge • Applications: • Parallel plate capacitor Announcements • Homework (due Wednesday) • Will take about a week to grade. • Good idea to make a hard or electronic copy of what you hand in. If 8 nC of charge are placed on the square loop of wire, the linear charge density will be 46% 37% A. 800 nC/m. B. 400 nC/m. C. 200 nC/m. D. 8 nC/m. E. 2 nC/m. 9% 4% 800 nC/m. 400 nC/m. 200 nC/m. 4% 8 nC/m. 2 nC/m. QuickCheck 26.6 If 8 nC of charge are placed on the square loop of wire, the linear charge density will be A. 800 nC/m. B. 400 nC/m. C. 200 nC/m. D. 8 nC/m. E. 2 nC/m. Slide 26-45 Continuous Charge Distributions The linear charge density of an object of length L and charge Q is defined as Linear charge density, which has units of C/m, is the amount of charge per meter of length. Slide 26-43 Q L Y-axis Line of charge x=0, y=L/2 𝑑𝑄 = 𝜆𝑑𝑦 X-axis L P=(xP,yP) x=0, y=-L/2 *no symmetry here Q L Line of charge: calculating… Y-axis 1) Find components of E-field due to dQ: 𝑑𝑞 • Find 𝐸𝑑𝑞 : 𝐸𝑑𝑞 = 𝐾 2 𝑟 2 - Find 𝑟𝑑𝑞 : 𝑟 = 𝑥𝑃 − 0 2 + 𝑦𝑃 − 𝑦 • Find components: 𝐸𝑑𝑞𝑋 𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝐸𝑑𝑞 𝑦 : x=0, y=L/2 dq=λdy 𝐸𝑑𝑞 𝑥 = 𝐸𝑑𝑞 cos 𝜃 (x=0,y) L 𝐸𝑑𝑞 𝑦 = −𝐸𝑑𝑞 sin 𝜃 X-axis 2 cos 𝜃 = sin 𝜃 𝑥𝑝 𝑟 𝑦−𝑦𝑃 = 𝑟 𝐿/2 P (xP,yP) θ 2) Determine limits of integration: −𝐿/2 … . 𝑑𝑦 3) Integrate components: 𝐿/2 𝐸𝑥 = න 𝐸𝑑𝑞𝑥 −𝐿/2 𝐿/2 x=0, y=-L/2 𝐸𝑥 = න 𝐾 𝜆𝑑𝑦 2 2 −𝐿/2 𝑥𝑝 + 𝑦𝑝 − 𝑦 𝐿/2 𝜆𝑑𝑦 =−𝐿/2 𝐾 2 2 (𝑥𝑝 + 𝑦𝑝 −𝑦 ) 3/2 𝑥𝑝 𝑥𝑃2 + 𝑦𝑃 − 𝑦 2 Integrating… xP dy E x K 2 2 3/ 2 ( xP ( y y P ) ) L / 2 L/2 ds s 2 2 3 / 2 (s a ) a 2 s 2 a 2 Let 𝑠 = 𝑦 − 𝑦𝑃 → 𝑑𝑠 = 𝑑𝑦 See Appendix A-3, or you can verify this by doing integration by parts. Integrating L / 2 yP ds E x KxP 2 2 3/ 2 ( xP s ) L / 2 y P ds s ( s 2 a 2 )3 / 2 a 2 s 2 a 2 Adding together L / 2 yP ds E x KxP 2 2 3/ 2 ( xP s ) L / 2 y P L / 2 yP E x KxP s x 2 P x s 2 P 2 L / 2 y P Adding together K E x xP L / 2 yP x ( L / 2 yP ) 2 P 2 2 2 xP ( L / 2 y P ) L / 2 yP Can you write an equation for the y-component? (Check this yourself.) K E y xP 1 x ( L / 2 yP ) 2 P 2 2 2 xP ( L / 2 y P ) 1 Problem-Solving Strategy: The electric field of a continuous distribution of charge Check: L / 2 yP L / 2 yP K E x 2 2 xP x 2 ( L / 2 y )2 x ( L / 2 y ) P P P P Oregon State University PH 213, Class #4 QuickCheck 26.8 At the dot, the y-component of the electric field due to the shaded region of charge is dfghgf A. A.A B. B C. B.C D. D E. C.E 67% D. E. 4% 6% A B 14% 10% C Slide 26-52 D E QuickCheck 26.8 At the dot, the y-component of the electric field due to the shaded region of charge is A. B. C. D. E. Slide 26-53 The rod has a continuous and uniform net charge distribution. Which of the following actions will increase the electric field strength at the position of the dot? 1. Lengthen the rod without moving its center or changing its charge 2. Widen the rod without moving its center or changing its charge 3. Shorten the rod without moving its center or changing its charge 4. None of the above. 49% 26% 15% Lengthen the rod without moving its center or changing its charge Oregon State University PH 213, Class #5 10% Widen the rod without moving its center or changing its charge Shorten the rod without moving its center or changing its charge None of the above. The rod has a continuous and uniform net charge distribution. Which of the following actions will increase the electric field strength at the position of the dot? 1. Lengthen the rod without moving its center or changing its charge 2. Widen the rod (into and out of the page) without moving its center or changing its charge 3. Shorten the rod without moving its center or changing its charge 4. None of the above. Electric field of ring Easy on axis! s-axis θ R P (x=0,y=0,zP) z-axis Electric field of ring Easy on axis! s-axis θ R P (x=0,y=0,z=zP) 2 𝑟 = 𝑧𝑃2 +𝑅 z-axis dq EK 2 r 2 zP Ez E r Cylindrical Coordinate system: r=(r,θ,z) Electric field of ring z P Rd Ez K 2 ( z P R 2 )3 / 2 Easy on axis! (s=R,θ,z=0) R P (zP,s=0,θ) r zP R 2 2 dq EK 2 r 2 zP Ez E r Electric field of ring z P R 2 Ez K 2 ( z P R 2 )3 / 2 Easy on axis! (s=R,θ,z=0) R P (zP,s=0,θ) r zP R 2 2 dq EK 2 r 2 zP Ez E r Electric field of ring KQzP Ez 2 ( z P R 2 )3 / 2 Easy on axis! (s=R,θ,z=0) R P (zP,s=0,θ) r zP R 2 2 dq EK 2 r 2 zP Ez E r A Ring of Charge Consider the on-axis electric field of a positively charged ring of radius R. Define the z-axis to be the axis of the ring. The electric field on the z-axis points away from the center of the ring, increasing in strength until reaching a maximum when |z| ≈ R, then decreasing: Slide 26-55 Which of the following statements is not true for the electric field of a semi-circle: A. We expect a 1/(distance squared) dependence for the field B. We expect the electric field in the y-direction to be zero C. The charge density will allow us to write: dQ = (λ)d(Θ) 42% 31% 21% 7% D. We need to take vector components before integrating We expect a 1/(distance squared) dependence for the field We expect The charge density will the electric allow us to field in the ydQ direction to write: = (λ)d(Θ) be zero We need to take vector components before integrating Electric field of semi-circle Which of the following statements is not true: 1.We expect a 1/(distance squared) dependence for the field 2.We expect the electric field in the y-direction to be zero 3.The charge density will allow us to write: dQ = (λ)d(Θ) 4.We need to take vector components before integrating Let’s look at planes… • Surface charge: Q A Q ( x, y)dxdy Oregon State University PH 213, Class #5 Continuous Charge Distributions The surface charge density of a twodimensional distribution of charge across a surface of area A is defined as: Surface charge density, with units C/m2, is the amount of charge per square meter. Slide 26-46 What is the differential amount of area dA, of a ring of width dR at a distance R from the center? 78% 1. 2. 3. 4. 2πR πR2 (2πR) dR (πR2 )dR 11% 11% 0% 2πR πR2 (2πR) dR (πR2 )dR What is the differential amount of area dA, of a ring of width dR at a distance R from the center? 1. 2πR 2. πR2 3. (2πR) dR 4. (πR2 )dR A Disk of Charge Electric field of Disk (s=R,θ,z=0) R P (zP,s=0,θ) Let’s look at limits for a charged disk: What about a square plane of charge? Square – Try this one for yourself z-axis Square – Try this one for yourself y-axis L P (xP,y=0,z=0) L x-axis Q L Recall: Line of charges x=0, y=L/2 KQ 1 E r r 2 ( L / 2) 2 L r x=0, y=-L/2 P z-axis Square – Try this one for yourself y-axis P (xP,y=0,z=0) dy x-axis Square – Try this one for yourself L/2 E L / 2 2 2 y xP KL E KLxP L/2 L / 2 2 2 2 y xP ( L / 2) 1 y 2 xP2 1 xP y x 2 2 P dy dy y 2 xP2 ( L / 2) 2 1 Square – Try this one for yourself E KLxP L/2 L / 2 1 y 2 xP2 dy y 2 xP2 ( L / 2) 2 1 wL E 4 K tan ( ) 2 xP 1 1 2 w 1 2 L L x 2 2 P Square – Try this one for yourself Now what if the square was very large? L>>xP E 4K tan () 1 E 2K 2 0