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PHYS 221 Recitation Kevin Ralphs Week 2 Overview • • • • • HW Questions Gauss’s Law Conductors vs Insulators Work-Energy Theorem with Electric Forces Potential HW Questions Ask Away…. Flux/Gauss’s Law • History – The 18th century was very productive for the development of fluid mechanics – This lead physicists to use the language of fluid mechanics to describe other physical phenomena • Mixed Results – Caloric theory of heat failed – Electrodynamics wildly successful Flux • Flux, from the Latin word for “flow,” quantifies the amount of a substance that flows through a surface each second • It makes sense that we could use the velocity of the substance at each point to calculate the flow • Obviously we only want the part of the vector normal to the surface, 𝑣𝑛 , to contribute because the parallel portion is flowing “along” the surface • Intuitively then we expect the flux to then be proportional to both the area of the surface and the magnitude of 𝑣𝑛 Φ ∝ 𝑣𝑛 𝐴 = 𝑣 ⋅ 𝐴 Flux • For the case of a flat surface and uniform velocity, it looks like this (pretend the electric field vector is a velocity): Flux • For curved surfaces and varying flows, if we chop the surface up into small enough pieces so that the surface is flat and the velocity uniform, then we can use an integral to sum up all the little “pieces” of flux Φ= 𝜌𝑣 ∙ 𝑑 𝐴 𝑆 𝑣: velocity field, 𝜌: weighting factor – for fluids this is usually the density of the fluid, for electricity we will take it to be 1 Gauss’s Law • What does it tell me? – The electric flux (flow) through a closed surface is proportional to the enclosed charge • Why do I care? 𝑞𝑒𝑛𝑐 Φ𝐸 = 𝜀𝑜 Situational: Closed Surface – You can use this to determine the magnitude of the electric field in highly symmetric instances; The symmetries of the charge distribution are reflected in the field they create – Flux through a closed surface and enclosed charge are easily exchanged Electrostatics • It may not have been explicit at this point, but we have been operating under some assumptions • We have assumed that all of our charges are either stationary or in a state of dynamic equilibrium • We do this because it simplifies the electric fields we are dealing with and eliminates the presence of magnetic fields • This has some consequences for conductors Conductors vs Insulators • Conductors – All charge resides on the surface, spread out to reduce the energy of the configuration – The electric field inside is zero – The potential on a conductor is constant (i.e. the conductor is an equipotential) – The electric field near the surface is perpendicular to the surface Note: These are all logically equivalent statements Conductors vs Insulators • Insulators – Charge may reside anywhere within the volume or on the surface and it will not move – Electric fields are often non-zero inside so the potential is changing throughout – Electric fields can make any angle with the surface Potential Energy • In a closed system with no dissipative forces Δ𝑃𝐸𝑒𝑙𝑒𝑐 + 𝑊 = 0 • The work done is due to the electric force so 𝑊 = 𝐹Δ𝑥 = 𝑞𝐸Δ𝑥 This formula assumes the following: • 𝐹 is constant in both magnitude and direction • The displacement Δ𝑥 is parallel to 𝐹 • WARNING: Since charge can be negative, 𝐸 and 𝐹 might point in opposite directions (this is called antiparallel) which would change the sign of W • This can be combined with the work-energy theorem to obtain the velocity a charged particle has after moving through an electric field Potential • What does it tell me? – The change in potential energy per unit charge an object has when moved between two points Δ𝑃𝐸𝑒𝑙𝑒𝑐 Δ𝑉 ≡ = −𝐸Δ𝑥 𝑞 • Why do I care? – The energy in a system is preserved unless there is some kind of dissipative force – So the potential allows you to use all the conservation of energy tools from previous courses (i.e. quick path to getting the velocity of a particle after it has moved through a potential difference) Potential • Word of caution: – Potential is not the same as potential energy, but they are intimately related – Electrostatic potential energy is not the same as potential energy of a particle. The former is the work to construct the entire configuration, while the later is the work required to bring that one particle in from infinity – There is no physical meaning to a potential, only difference in potential matter. This means that you can assign any point as a reference point for the potential – The potential must be continuous Tying it Together Multiply by q Vectors Electric Field Electric Force Multiply by -Δx Scalars Multiply by -Δx Change in Potential Change in PE Multiply by q Analogies with Gravity • Electricity and magnetism can feel very abstract because we don’t usually recognize how much we interact with these forces • There are many similarities between gravitational and electric forces • The major difference is that the electric force can be repulsive • Gravity even has a version of Gauss’s law Charge Force Electricity q 𝑄𝑞 𝑘 2𝑟 𝑟 Gravity m 𝐺 𝑀𝑚 𝑟 𝑟2 Field 𝐸=𝑘 𝑔=𝐺 𝑄 𝐹 𝑟 = 𝑟2 𝑞 PE 𝑞Δ𝑉 𝑀𝑚 𝐹 𝑚 𝑔Δ𝑦 𝑟 = 𝑟2 𝑚