Phy 1chp
Phy 1chp
Phy 1chp
ELECTRIC CHARGES
AND FIELDS
1.1 INTRODUCTION
All of us have the experience of seeing a spark or hearing a crackle when we take off
our synthetic clothes or sweater, particularly in dry weather. This is almost
inevitable with ladies garments like a polyester saree. Have you ever tried to find
any explanation for this phenomenon? Another common example of electric
discharge is the lightning that we see in the sky during thunderstorms. We also
experience a sensation of an electric shock either while opening the door of a car or
holding the iron bar of a bus after sliding from our seat. The reason for these
experiences is discharge of electric charges through our body, which were
accumulated due to rubbing of insulating surfaces. You might have also heard that
this is due to generation of static electricity. This is precisely the topic we are going
to discuss in this and the next chapter. Static means anything that does not move or
change with time. Electrostatics deals with the study of forces, fields and potentials
arising from static charges.
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goes to Thales of Miletus, Greece, around 600 BC. The name electricity is coined
from the Greek word elektron meaning amber. Many such pairs of materials were
known which on rubbing could attract light objects like straw, pith balls and bits of
papers. You can perform the following activity at home to experience such an effect.
Cut out long thin strips of white paper and lightly iron them. Take them near a TV
http://ephysics.physics.ucla.edu/travoltage/HTML/staticElectricity.htm
screen or computer monitor. You will see that the strips get attracted to the screen.
In fact they remain stuck to the screen for a while.
It was observed that if two glass rods rubbed with wool or silk cloth are brought close to
each other, they repel each other [Fig. 1.1(a)]. The two strands FIGURE 1.1 Rods and pith balls: like
Interactive animation on simple electrostatic experiments: unlike charges attract each other.
charges repel and of wool or two pieces of silk cloth, with which
the rods were rubbed, also repel each other. However, the glass rod and
wool attracted each other. Similarly, two plastic rods rubbed with cat’s fur
repelled each other [Fig. 1.1(b)] but attracted the fur. On the other hand, the
plastic rod attracts the glass rod [Fig. 1.1(c)] and repel the silk or wool with
which the glass rod is rubbed. The glass rod repels the fur.
If a plastic rod rubbed with fur is made to touch two small pith balls (now-
a-days we can use polystyrene balls) suspended by silk or nylon thread, then
the balls repel each other [Fig. 1.1(d)] and are also repelled by the rod. A
similar effect is found if the pith balls are touched with a glass rod rubbed with
silk [Fig. 1.1(e)]. A dramatic observation is that a pith ball touched with glass
rod attracts another pith ball touched with plastic rod [Fig. 1.1(f)].
These seemingly simple facts were established from years of efforts and
careful experiments and their analyses. It was concluded, after many careful
studies by different scientists, that there were only two kinds of an entity
which is called the electric charge. We say that the bodies like glass or plastic
rods, silk, fur and pith balls are electrified. They acquire an electric charge on
rubbing. The experiments on pith balls suggested that there are two kinds of
electrification and we find that (i) like charges repel and (ii) unlike charges
attract each other. The experiments also demonstrated that the charges are
transferred from the rods to the pith balls on contact. It is said that the pith
balls are electrified or are charged by contact. The property which
differentiates the two kinds of charges is called the polarity of charge.
When a glass rod is rubbed with silk, the rod acquires one kind of charge
and the silk acquires the second kind of charge. This is true for any pair of
objects that are rubbed to be electrified. Now if the electrified glass rod is
brought in contact with silk, with which it was rubbed, they no longer attract
each other. They also do not attract or repel other light objects as they did on
being electrified.
Thus, the charges acquired after rubbing are lost when the charged bodies are
brought in contact. What can you conclude from these observations? It just tells us
that unlike charges acquired by the objects neutralise or nullify each other’s effect.
Therefore the charges were named as positive and negative by the American
scientist Benjamin Franklin. We know that when we add a positive number to a
negative number of the same magnitude, the sum is zero. This might have been the
philosophy in naming the charges as positive and negative. By convention, the
charge on glass rod or cat’s fur is called positive and that on plastic rod or silk is
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termed negative. If an object possesses an electric charge, it is said to be electrified
or charged. When it has no charge it is said to be neutral.
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Students can make a simple electroscope as follows [Fig.
1.2(b)]: Take a thin aluminium curtain rod with ball ends fitted
for hanging the curtain. Cut out a piece of length about 20 cm
with the ball at one end and flatten the cut end. Take a large
bottle that can hold this rod and a cork which will fit in the
opening of the bottle. Make a hole in the cork sufficient to hold
the curtain rod snugly. Slide the rod through the hole in the
cork with the cut end on the lower side and ball end projecting
above the cork. Fold a small, thin aluminium foil (about 6 cm in
length) in the middle and attach it to the flattened end of the
rod by cellulose tape. This forms the leaves of your
electroscope. Fit the cork in the bottle with about 5 cm of the
ball end projecting above the cork. A paper scale may be put
inside the bottle in advance to measure the separation of
leaves. The separation is a rough measure of the amount of
charge on the electroscope.
To understand how the electroscope works, use the white
paper strips we used for seeing the attraction of charged
bodies. Fold the strips into half so that you make a mark of
fold. Open the strip and iron it lightly with the mountain fold
up, as shown in Fig. 1.3. Hold the strip by pinching it at the
fold. You would notice that the two halves move apart.
FIGURE 1.2 Electroscopes: (a) The gold leaf electroscope,
(b) Schematics of a simple electroscope.
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molecules together, forces that hold atoms together in a solid, the adhesive force of glue, forces associated with
surface tension, all are basically electrical in nature, arising from the forces between charged particles. Thus the
electric force is all pervasive and it encompasses almost each and every field associated with our life. It is therefore
essential that we learn more about such a force.
To electrify a neutral body, we need to add or remove one kind of charge. When we say that a body is charged,
we always refer to this excess charge or deficit of charge. In solids, some of the electrons, being less tightly bound
in the atom, are the charges which are transferred from one body to the other. A body can thus be charged
positively by losing some of its electrons. Similarly, a body can be charged negatively by gaining electrons. When
we rub a glass rod with silk, some of the electrons from the rod are transferred to the silk cloth. Thus the rod gets
positively charged and the silk gets negatively charged. No new charge is created in the process of rubbing. Also
the number of electrons, that are transferred, is a very small fraction of the total number of electrons in the
material body. Also only the less tightly bound electrons in a material body can be transferred from it to another by
rubbing. Therefore, when a body is rubbed with another, the bodies get charged and that is why we have to stick
to certain pairs of materials to notice charging on rubbing the bodies.
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1.4 CHARGING BY INDUCTION
When we touch a pith ball with an electrified plastic rod, some of the negative charges on the rod are
transferred to the pith ball and it also gets charged. Thus the pith ball is charged by contact. It is then
repelled by the plastic rod but is attracted by a glass rod which is oppositely charged. However, why a
electrified rod attracts light objects, is a question we have still left unanswered. Let us try to
understand what could be happening by performing the following experiment.
(i) Bring two metal spheres, A and B, supported on insulating stands, in contact as shown in Fig.
1.4(a).
(ii) Bring a positively charged rod near one of the spheres, say A, taking care that it does not touch the
sphere. The free electrons in the spheres are attracted towards the rod. This leaves an excess of
positive charge on the rear surface of sphere B. Both kinds of charges are bound in the metal
spheres and cannot escape. They, therefore, reside on the surfaces, as shown in Fig. 1.4(b). The left
surface of sphere A, has an excess of negative charge and the right surface of sphere B, has an
excess of positive charge. However, not all of the electrons in the spheres have accumulated on the
left surface of A. As the negative charge starts building up at the left surface of A, other electrons
are repelled by these. In a short time, equilibrium is reached under the action of force of attraction
of the rod and the force of repulsion due to the accumulated charges. Fig. 1.4(b) shows the
equilibrium situation. The process is called induction of charge and happens almost instantly. The
accumulated charges remain on the surface, as shown, till the glass rod is held near the sphere. If
the rod is removed, the charges are not acted by any outside force and they redistribute to their
original neutral state.
(iii) Separate the spheres by a small distance while the glass rod is still held near sphere A, as shown in
Fig. 1.4(c). The two spheres are found to be oppositely charged and attract each other.
(iv) Remove the rod. The charges on spheres rearrange themselves as shown in Fig. 1.4(d). Now,
separate the spheres quite apart. The charges on them get uniformly distributed over them, as
shown in Fig. 1.4(e).
In this process, the metal spheres will each be equal and oppositely charged. This is charging by
induction. The positively charged glass rod
Charging bydoes not lose any of its charge, contrary to the process of charging by contact.
n. When electrified rods are brought near light objects, a similar effect takes place.
The rods induce opposite charges on the near surfaces of the objects and similar
charges move to the farther side of the object.
[This happens even when the light object is not a conductor. The mechanism for how this happens is explained
later in Sections 1.10 and 2.10.] The centres of the two types of charges are slightly separated. We know that
opposite charges attract while similar charges repel. However, the magnitude of force depends on the distance
between the charges and in this case the force of attraction overweighs the force of repulsion. As a result the
particles like bits of paper or pith balls, being light, are pulled towards the rods.
Example 1.1 How can you charge a metal sphere positively without touching it?
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Solution Figure 1.5(a) shows an uncharged metallic sphere on an insulating metal stand. Bring a negatively charged rod
close to the metallic sphere, as shown in Fig. 1.5(b). As the rod is brought close to the sphere, the free electrons in the
sphere move away due to repulsion and start piling up at the farther end. The near end becomes positively charged
due to deficit of electrons. This process of charge distribution stops when the net force on the free electrons inside the
metal is zero. Connect the sphere to the ground by a conducting wire. The electrons will flow to the ground while the
positive charges at the near end will remain held there due to the attractive force of the negative charges on the rod, as
shown in Fig. 1.5(c). Disconnect the sphere from the ground. The positive charge continues to be held at the near end
[Fig. 1.5(d)]. Remove the electrified rod. The positive charge will spread uniformly over the sphere as shown in Fig.
1.5(e).
FIGURE 1.5
In this experiment, the metal sphere gets charged by the process of induction and the rod does not lose
any of its charge.
Similar steps are involved in charging a metal sphere negatively by induction, by bringing a positively
charged rod near it. In this case the electrons will flow from the ground to the sphere when the sphere is
connected to the ground with a wire. Can you explain why?
1.5 BASIC PROPERTIES OF ELECTRIC CHARGE
We have seen that there are two types of charges, namely positive and negative and their effects tend to cancel
each other. Here, we shall now describe some other properties of the electric charge.
If the sizes of charged bodies are very small as compared to the distances between them, we treat them as
point charges. All the charge content of the body is assumed to be concentrated at one point in space.
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1.5.2 Charge is conserved
We have already hinted to the fact that when bodies are charged by rubbing, there is transfer of electrons from
one body to the other; no new charges are either created or destroyed. A picture of particles of electric charge
enables us to understand the idea of conservation of charge. When we rub two bodies, what one body gains in
charge the other body loses. Within an isolated system consisting of many charged bodies, due to interactions
among the bodies, charges may get redistributed but it is found that the total charge of the isolated system is
always conserved. Conservation of charge has been established experimentally.
It is not possible to create or destroy net charge carried by any isolated system although the charge carrying
particles may be created or destroyed in a process. Sometimes nature creates charged particles: a neutron turns
into a proton and an electron. The proton and electron thus created have equal and opposite charges and the total
charge is zero before and after the creation.
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tens or hundreds of e, i.e., they can be counted, they appear in discrete lumps and quantisation of charge cannot
be ignored. It is the scale involved that is very important.
Example 1.2 If 109 electrons move out of a body to another body every second, how
much time is required to get a total charge of 1 C on the other body?
Solution In one second 109 electrons move out of the body. Therefore the charge
given out in one second is 1.6 × 10 –19 × 109 C = 1.6 × 10–10 C. The time required to
accumulate a charge of 1 C can then be estimated to be 1 C ÷ (1.6 × 10 –10 C/s) = 6.25
× 109 s = 6.25 × 109 ÷ (365 × 24 × 3600) years = 198 years. Thus to collect a charge of
one coulomb, from a body from which 10 9 electrons move out every second, we will
need approximately 200 years. One coulomb is, therefore, a very large unit for many
practical purposes.
E XAMPLE 1.2
It is, however, also important to know what is roughly the number of electrons
contained in a piece of one cubic centimetre of a material. A cubic piece of copper of
side 1 cm contains about 2.5 × 1024 electrons.
Example 1.3 How much positive and negative charge is there in a cup of water?
Solution Let us assume that the mass of one cup of water is 250 g. The molecular
mass of water is 18g. Thus, one mole
(= 6.02 × 1023 molecules) of water is 18 g. Therefore the number of molecules in one
E XAMPLE 1.3
q q
F=k 1
2
2
(1.1)
r
How did Coulomb arrive at this law from his experiments? Coulomb used a torsion balance* for measuring the
force between two charged metallic
* A torsion balance is a sensitive device to measure force. It was also used later by Cavendish to measure the very feeble
gravitational force between two objects, to verify Newton’s Law of Gravitation.
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spheres. When the separation between two spheres is much larger
than the radius of each sphere, the charged spheres may be
regarded as point charges. However, the charges on the spheres
were unknown, to begin with. How then could he discover a relation like
Eq. (1.1)? Coulomb thought of the following simple way: Suppose the
charge on a metallic sphere is q. If the sphere is put in contact with an
identical uncharged sphere, the charge will spread over the two
spheres. By symmetry, the charge on each sphere will be q/2*.
Repeating this process, we can get charges q/2, q/4, etc. Coulomb
varied the distance for a fixed pair of charges and measured the
force for different separations. He then varied the charges in pairs,
keeping the distance fixed for each pair. Comparing forces for
ε
ε0 is called the permittivity of free space . The value of 0 in SI units is ε0 = 8.854 × 10–12 C2 N–1m–2
* Implicit in this is the assumption of additivity of charges and conservation: two charges (q/2 each) add up to make a total charge q.
Since force is a vector, it is better to write Coulomb’s law in the
vector notation. Let the position vectors of charges q1 and q2 be r1
and r2 respectively [see Fig.1.6(a)]. We denote force on q1 due to q2
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by F12 and force on q2 due to q1 by F21. The two point charges q1 and q2 have been numbered 1 and 2 for
convenience and the vector leading from 1 to 2 is denoted by r21:
r21 = r2 – r1
In the same way, the vector leading from 2 to 1 is denoted by r 12:
r12 = r1 – r2 = – r21
The magnitude of the vectors r21 and r12 is denoted by r21 and r12, respectively (r12 = r21). The
direction of a vector is specified by a unit vector along the vector. To denote the direction from 1
to 2 (or from 2 to 1), we define the unit vectors:
FIGURE 1.6 (b) Forces between charges.(a) Geometry and r 21 r21 r12 = r12 , r21 = r 12
=, r12 r21
Coulomb’s force law between two point charges q1 and q2 located at r1 and r2 is then
expressed as
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protons. (b) Estimate the accelerations of electron and proton due to the electrical force of their mutual attraction when they
are 1 Å (= 10-10 m) apart? (mp = 1.67 × 10–27 kg, me = 9.11 × 10–31 kg)
Solution
(a) (i) The electric force between an electron and a proton at a distance r apart is:
Fe = −4π1ε0 er22 where the negative sign indicates that the force is attractive. The corresponding gravitational force (always
attractive) is:
mp m
FG = −G 2e
r
where mp and me are the masses of a proton and an electron respectively.
Fe = e2 = 2.4 10× 39
FG 4πε0Gm mp e
(ii) On similar lines, the ratio of the magnitudes of electric force to the gravitational force between two protons at a
distance r apart is :
e2
1 9 2 2 –19 2 –10 2
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Solution Let the original charge on sphere A be q and that on B be q′. At a distance r between their centres, the magnitude
of the electrostatic force on each is given by
F = 4π1ε0 qqr2′
neglecting the sizes of spheres A and B in comparison to r. When an identical but uncharged sphere C touches A, the
charges redistribute on A and C and, by symmetry, each sphere carries a charge q/2. Similarly, after D touches B, the
redistributed charge on each is q′/2. Now, if the separation between A and B is halved, the magnitude of the electrostatic
force on each is
E
XAMPLE
F′ = 4π1ε0 ( /2)(q (r/2)q′2/2) = 4π1ε0 (qqr2′) = F
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which again is the Coulomb force on q1 due to q3, even though other charge q2 is present.
Thus the total force F1 on q1 due to the two charges q2 and q3 is given as
= ˆ + ˆ
F1 = F12 + F13 4π1ε0 q qr1122 2 r 12 4π1ε0 q qr1132 3 r13 (1.4)
The above calculation of force can be generalised to a system of charges more than three, as shown in Fig.
1.8(b).
The principle of superposition says that in a system of charges q1, q2, ..., qn, the force on q1 due to q2 is the
same as given by Coulomb’s law, i.e., it is unaffected by the presence of the other charges q3, q4, ..., qn. The total
force F1 on the charge q1, due to all other charges, is then given by the vector sum of the forces F 12, F13, ..., F1n:
i.e.,
F1 = F12 + F13 + ...+ F1n = 4π1ε0 q qr1 2122 rˆ12 + q qr1 3132 rˆ13 + ...+ q q r112nn ˆr1n
n
= q1 ∑ rq2i rˆ1i (1.5)
4 πε
0 i=2 1i
The vector sum is obtained as usual by the parallelogram law of addition of vectors. All of electrostatics is
basically a consequence of Coulomb’s law and the superposition principle.
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Similarly the total force on charge –q at C is F3 = 3 F nˆ , where nˆ is the unit vector along the direction bisecting the ∠BCA.
1.7 It is interesting to see that the sum of the forces on the three charges is zero, i.e.,
XAMPLE
F1 + F2 + F3 = 0
The result is not at all surprising. It follows straight from the fact that Coulomb’s law is consistent with Newton’s third
law. The proof is left to you as an exercise.
E
E r( ) = 4π1ε0 rQ2 rˆ = 4π1ε0 rQ2 rˆ (1.6) where ˆr = r/r, is a unit vector from the origin to the point r. Thus,
Eq.(1.6) specifies the value of the electric field for each value of the position vector r.
The word “field” signifies how some distributed quantity (which could be a scalar or a
vector) varies with position. The effect of the charge has been incorporated in the
existence of the electric field. We obtain the force F exerted by a charge Q on a charge
q, as
Note that the charge q also exerts an equal and opposite force on the charge Q.
The electrostatic force between the charges Q and q can be looked upon as an
interaction between charge q and the electric field of Q and vice versa. If we denote
the position of charge q by the vector r, it experiences a force F equal to the charge q
multiplied by the electric field E at the location of q. Thus,
*
F(r) = q E(r) (1.8)
Equation (1.8) defines the SI unit of electric field as N/C*.
Some important remarks may be made here:
From Eq. (1.8), we can infer that if q is unity, the electric field due to a charge Q is
numerically equal to the force exerted by it. Thus, the electric field due to a charge
Q at a point in space may be defined as the force that a unit positive charge would
(i) experience if placed
FIGURE 1.11 Electric field (a) due
to a An alternate unit V/m will be introduced in the next chapter.
charge Q, (b) due to a charge –Q.
at that point. The charge Q, which is producing the electric field, is called a source charge and the charge q,
which tests the effect of a source charge, is called a test charge. Note that the source charge Q must remain at
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its original location. However, if a charge q is brought at any point around Q, Q itself is bound to experience an
electrical force due to q and will tend to move. A way out of this difficulty is to make q negligibly small. The
force F is then negligibly small but the ratio F/q is finite and defines the electric field:
F
E = limq→0 q (1.9)
A practical way to get around the problem (of keeping Q undisturbed in the presence of q) is to hold Q to its
location by unspecified forces!
This may look strange but actually this is what happens in practice. When we are considering the electric force on a
test charge q due to a charged planar sheet (Section 1.15), the charges on the sheet are held to their locations by
the forces due to the unspecified charged constituents inside the sheet.
(ii) Note that the electric field E due to Q, though defined operationally in terms of some test charge q, is
independent of q. This is because F is proportional to q, so the ratio F/q does not depend on q. The force F on
the charge q due to the charge Q depends on the particular location of charge q which may take any value in
the space around the charge Q. Thus, the electric field E due to Q is also dependent on the space coordinate r.
For different positions of the charge q all over the space, we get different values of electric field E. The field
exists at every point in three-dimensional space.
(iii) For a positive charge, the electric field will be directed radially outwards from the charge. On the other hand, if
the source charge is negative, the electric field vector, at each point, points radially inwards.
(iv) Since the magnitude of the force F on charge q due to charge Q depends only on the distance r of the charge q
from charge Q, the magnitude of the electric field E will also depend only on the distance r. Thus at equal
distances from the charge Q, the magnitude of its electric field E is same. The magnitude of electric field E due
to a point charge is thus same on a sphere with the point charge at its centre; in other words, it has a spherical
symmetry.
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1 q21 ˆr1
E2 = 4πε1 0 qr222P ˆr2P
E1 = 4πε0 1rP P
where ˆr2P is a unit vector in the direction from q2 to P and r2P is the
where ˆr1P is a unit vector in the direction distance between q2 and P. Similar expressions hold good for fields
from q1 to P, and r1P is the distance E3, E4, ..., En due to charges q3, q4, ..., qn.
between q1 and P. In the same manner, By the superposition principle, the electric field E at r due to the
electric field E2 at r due to q2 at system of charges is (as shown in Fig. 1.12)
r2 is E(r) = E1 (r) + E2 (r) + … + En(r)
q1 ˆr + 1 q2 ˆr + ... + 1qn ˆr
4πε0 r12P 1P 4πε0 r22P 2P 4πε0 rn2P nP
1 n qi
E is a vector quantity that varies from one point to another point in space and is determined from the positions of
the source charges.
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Solution In Fig.
1.13(a) the field is
upward, so the
negatively
charged electron
experiences
a downward
force of FIGURE 1.13 magnitude
eE where E is
the magnitude of the electric field. The acceleration of the electron is ae =
eE/me
where me is the mass of the electron.
Starting from rest, the time required by the electron to fall through a distance h
2h 2 hm
t = = e
is given by ae eE e
–19 –31
For e = 1.6 × 10 C, me = 9.11 × 10 kg,
× 10–9s
In Fig. 1.13 (b), the field is downward, and the positively charged proton
E XAMPLE 1.8
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The electric field vector E1B at B due to the positive charge q1 points towards the left
and has a magnitude
E XAMPLE 1.9
1C = 2C = (9 10× 9 Nm C ) (10 C2 –2 2× −8 ) = 9 × 103 N C–1
E E
(0.10m)
The directions in which these two vectors point are indicated in
Fig. 1.14. The resultant of these two vectors is π π
=
EE 1 cos +E2cos = 9 × 103 N C–1
3 3
E points towards the right.
1.9 ELECTRIC FIELD LINES
We have studied electric field in the last section. It is a vector quantity and can be represented as we represent
vectors. Let us try to represent E due to a point charge pictorially. Let the point charge be placed at the origin.
Draw vectors pointing along the direction of the electric field with their lengths proportional to the strength of the
field at each point. Since the magnitude of electric field at a point decreases inversely as the square of the distance
of that point from the charge, the vector gets shorter as one goes
away from the origin, always pointing radially outward. Figure 1.15
shows such a picture. In this figure, each arrow indicates the
electric field, i.e., the force acting on a unit positive charge, placed at
the tail of that arrow. Connect the arrows pointing in one direction
and the resulting figure represents a field line. We thus get many
field lines, all pointing outwards from the point charge. Have we
lost the information about the strength or magnitude of the field
now, because it was contained in the length of the arrow? No.
Now the magnitude of the field is represented by the density of
field lines. E is strong near the charge, so the density of field lines is
more near the charge and the lines are closer. Away from the
charge, FIGURE 1.15 Field of a point charge.
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the field gets weaker and the density of field lines is less, resulting in well-
separated lines.
Another person may draw more lines. But the number of lines is not important. In fact, an infinite
number of lines can be drawn in any region.
It is the relative density of lines in different regions which is important.
We draw the figure on the plane of paper, i.e., in twodimensions but
we live in three-dimensions. So if one wishes to estimate the density of
field lines, one has to consider the number of lines per unit cross-
sectional area, perpendicular to the lines. Since the electric field
decreases as the square of the distance from a point charge and the area
enclosing the charge increases as the square of the distance, the number
of field lines crossing the enclosing area remains constant, whatever may
be the distance of the area from the charge.
We started by saying that the field lines carry information about the
direction of electric field at different points in space. Having drawn a
certain set of field lines, the relative density (i.e., closeness) of the field
FIGURE 1.16 Dependence of electric lines at different points indicates the relative strength of electric field at
field strength on the those points. The field lines crowd where the field is strong and are
distance and its relation to the number spaced apart where it is weak. Figure 1.16 shows a set of field lines. We
of field lines.
can imagine two equal and small elements of area placed at points R and S normal to the field lines there. The
number of field lines in our picture cutting the area elements is proportional to the magnitude of field at these
points. The picture shows that the field at R is stronger than at S.
To understand the dependence of the field lines on the area, or rather the solid angle subtended by an area
element, let us try to relate the area with the solid angle, a generalization of angle to three dimensions. Recall how
a (plane) angle is defined in two-dimensions. Let a small transverse line element ∆l be placed at a distance r from a
point O. Then the angle subtended by ∆l at O can be approximated as ∆θ = ∆l/r. Likewise, in three-dimensions
the solid angle* subtended by a small perpendicular plane area ∆S, at a distance r, can be written as ∆Ω = ∆S/r2.
We know that in a given solid angle the number of radial field lines is the same. In Fig. 1.16, for two points P 1 and
P2 at distances r1 and r2 from the charge, the element of area subtending the solid angle ∆Ω is r12 ∆Ω at P1 and an
element of area r22 ∆Ω at P2, respectively. The number of lines (say n) cutting these area elements are the same.
P
The number of field lines, cutting unit area element is therefore n/(r12 ∆Ω) at 1 andn/(r22 ∆Ω) at P2, respectively.
Since n and ∆Ω are common, the strength of the field clearly has a 1/r2 dependence.
The picture of field lines was invented by Faraday to develop an intuitive non- mathematical way of visualizing
electric fields around charged configurations. Faraday called them lines of force. This term is somewhat misleading,
especially in case of magnetic fields. The more appropriate term is field lines (electric or magnetic) that we have
adopted in this book.
Electric field lines are thus a way of pictorially mapping the electric field around a configuration of charges. An
electric field line is, in general,
* Solid angle is a measure of a cone. Consider the intersection of the given cone with a sphere of radius R. The solid angle ∆Ω of the
cone is defined to be equal to ∆S/R2, where ∆S is the area on the sphere cut out by the cone.
a curve drawn in such a way that the tangent to it at each point is in the direction of the net field at that point. An
arrow on the curve is obviously necessary to specify the direction of electric field from the two possible directions
indicated by a tangent to the curve. A field line is a space curve, i.e., a curve in three dimensions.
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Figure 1.17 shows the field lines around some simple charge configurations. As mentioned earlier, the field
lines are in 3-dimensional space, though the figure shows them only in a plane. The field lines of a single positive
charge are radially outward while those of a single negative charge are radially inward. The field lines around a
system of two positive charges (q, q) give a vivid pictorial description of their mutual repulsion, while those around
the configuration of two equal and opposite charges (q, –q), a dipole, show clearly the mutual attraction between
the charges. The field lines follow some important general properties:
(i) Field lines start from positive charges and end at negative charges. If there is a single charge, they may start or
end at infinity.
(ii) In a charge-free region, electric field lines can be taken to be continuous curves without any breaks.
(iii) Two field lines can never cross each other. (If they did, the field at the point of intersection will not have a
unique direction, which is absurd.)
(iv) Electrostatic field lines do not form any closed loops. This follows from the conservative nature of electric field
(Chapter 2).
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point on a closed
surface equals ∆S nˆ where ∆S is the magnitude of the area element and nˆ is a
unit vector in the direction of outward normal at that point.
We now come to the definition of electric flux. Electric flux ∆φ through an area
element ∆S is defined by
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∆φ = E.∆S = E ∆S cosθ (1.11) which, as seen before, is proportional to the number of field lines cutting
the area element. The angle θ here is the angle between E and ∆S. For a closed surface, with the convention stated
already, θ is the angle between and the outward normal to the area element. Notice we could look at
FIGURE 1.19 E
Convention for the expression E ∆S cosθ in two ways: E (∆S cosθ ) i.e., E times the
number
defining normal nˆ
of field
lines is and ∆S. * It will not be proper to say that the number of field lines is equal to E∆S. The
after all, a matter of how many field lines we choose to draw. What is physically significant is the relative number of field lines crossing
a given area at different points.
projection of area normal to E, or E⊥ ∆S, i.e., component of E along the normal to the area element times the
magnitude of the area element. The unit of electric flux is N C –1 m2.
The basic definition of electric flux given by Eq. (1.11) can be used, in principle, to calculate the total flux
through any given surface. All we have to do is to divide the surface into small area elements, calculate the flux at
each element and add them up. Thus, the total flux φ through a surface S is
φ ~ Σ E.∆S (1.12)
The approximation sign is put because the electric field E is taken to be constant over the small area element.
This is mathematically exact only when you take the limit ∆S → 0 and the sum in Eq. (1.12) is written as an
integral.
E−q = − 4 πε0(qr + a)2 pˆ [1.13(a)] where pˆ is the unit vector along the dipole axis (from –q to q).
Also
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2 22 pˆ (1.14)
= ˆ
E 4πε 3 p (r >> a) (1.15)
0r
2 qa
E E= +q +E−q = πqε0 (ra−1 )2 − ( r =− o 2 +a2 3) /2 pˆ
4 a+1 )2pˆ (1.17)
ε
4 ar = q 4π (r
4 π εo ( r −a )
For r >> a At large distances (r >> a), this reduces to
4 qa
From Eqs. (1.15) and (1.18), it is clear that the dipole field at large distances does not involve q and a
separately; it depends on the product qa. This suggests the definition of dipole moment. The dipole moment vector
p of an electric dipole is defined by
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ˆ
p = q × 2a p (1.19) that is, it is a vector whose magnitude is charge q times the separation 2a
(between the pair of charges q, –q) and the direction is along the line from –q to q. In terms of p, the electric
field of a dipole at large distances takes simple forms:
At a point on the dipole axis
2p
E= 3
4πεor (r >> a)
At a point on the equatorial plane (1.20)
=− p
E 3 (r >> a) 4πεr (1.21)
o
Notice the important point that the dipole field at large distances falls off not as 1/ r2 but as1/r3. Further, the
magnitude and the direction of the dipole field depends not only on the distance r but also on the angle between
the position vector r and the dipole moment p.
We can think of the limit when the dipole size 2a approaches zero, the charge q approaches infinity in such a
way that the product p = q × 2a is finite. Such a dipole is referred to as a point dipole. For a point dipole, Eqs. (1.20)
and (1.21) are exact, true for any r.
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Example 1.10 Two charges ±10 µC are placed 5.0 mm apart.
Determine the electric field at (a) a point P on the axis of the dipole
15 cm away from its centre O on the side of the positive charge, as
shown in Fig. 1.21(a), and (b) a point Q, 15 cm away from O on a line
passing through O and normal to the axis of the dipole, as shown in
Fig. 1.21(b).
E
XAMPLE
1.10
FIGURE 1.21
* Centre of a collection of positive point charges is defined much the same way
∑qi r
as the centre of mass:
rcm = i .
∑qi
i
Solution (a) Field at P due to charge +10 µC
10−5 C
1
2 −4 2
= 4 (8.854 10π × −12 2C N−1m−2) × = 4.13(15 − 0.25)
× 10 N C–1×along
6
10 m BP
1
2 −4 2
= 4 (8.854 10π×10–5−12CC N m )2 −1 −2 × (15 + 0.25) ×10 m
E= 2 p
4π ε 0r3 (r/a >> 1)
where p = 2a q is the magnitude of the dipole moment.
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The direction of electric field on the dipole axis is always along the direction of the dipole moment vector (i.e., from – q to q).
Here,
p =10–5 C × 5 × 10–3 m = 5 × 10–8 C m Therefore,
E = 2 5 10× × −12 2−8 Cm × 3 1 −6 3 = 2.6 × 105 N C–1 4 (8.854 10π × C N−1m−2) (15) ×10 m
along the dipole moment direction AB, which is close to the result obtained earlier.
(b) Field at Q due to charge + 10 µC at B
=
4 π (8.854 ×1010−5−12CC2 N−1 m−2 ) × [152 + (0.25) ]12 × 10−4 m2
= 3.99 × 106 N C–1 along BQ
p
=
= 4 (8.854E 10π4×π −12 (r/a
ε 2rC3 N−1m−2) × [15
>> 1)] 1012 × −4m2 = 3.99 × 106 N C–1 along QA.
2+(0.25)
0
5× 10−8 Cmof these two forces1with equal magnitudes cancel along the direction OQ but add up along the
Clearly, the components
= −12 2
× 3 −6 3 E
direction
4 πparallel
(8.854× to BA.
10 C
–1 –2
Therefore,
N m the (15) ×10electric
) resultant m field at Q due to the two charges
XAMPLE at A and B is
5 –1
= 1.33 ×10 N C .
The direction of electric field = 2 ×in this case is opposite× to × 10direction
3.99the 6
N C–1along BA
of the dipole moment vector. Again the result agrees with that obtained 1.10
5 –1
= 1.33
before.
× 10 N C along BA.
As in (a), we can expect to get approximately the same result by directly using the formula for dipole field at a point on the
normal to the axis of the dipole:
1.12 DIPOLE IN A UNIFORM EXTERNAL FIELD
Consider a permanent dipole of dipole moment p in a uniform external field E, as shown in Fig. 1.22. (By
permanent dipole, we mean that p exists irrespective of E; it has not been induced by E.)
There is a force qE on q and a force –qE on –q. The net force on the dipole is zero, since E is uniform. However,
the charges are separated, so the forces act at different points, resulting in a torque on the dipole. When the net
force is zero, the torque (couple) is independent of the origin. Its magnitude equals the magnitude of each force
multiplied by the arm of the couple (perpendicular distance between the two antiparallel forces).
Magnitude of torque = q E × 2 a sinθ
= 2 q a E sinθ
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=
σ
∆S
We can do this at different points
on the conductor and thus arrive at a
continuous function σ, called the
surface charge density. The surface
charge density σ so defined ignores
the quantisation of charge and the
discontinuity in charge distribution at
the microscopic level*. σ represents
macroscopic surface charge density,
which in a sense, is a smoothed out
average of the microscopic charge
density over an area element ∆S
which, as said before, is large
microscopically but small
macroscopically. The units for σ are
C/m2.
Similar considerations apply for a
FIGURE 1.24 line charge distribution and a volume
Definition of linear, surface and volume charge densities. In each case, the charge distribution. The linear charge
element (∆l, ∆S, ∆V) chosen is small on the macroscopic density λ of a wire is defined by
scale but contains
a very large number of microscopic constituents.
Q
discussion, the charged comb ‘polarizes’ the piece of paper, i.e., ∆
induces a net dipole moment in the direction of field. Further, the =
electric field due to the comb is not uniform. In this situation, it is λ
easily seen that the paper should move in the direction of the comb! ∆l where ∆l is a small line
element of wire on the macroscopic
scale that, however, includes a large
1.13 CONTINUOUS CHARGE DISTRIBUTION number of microscopic charged
We have so far dealt with charge configurations involving discrete
constituents, and ∆Q is the charge
charges q1, q2, ..., qn. One reason why we restricted to discrete charges
contained in that line element. The
is that the mathematical treatment is simpler and does not involve
units for λ are C/m. The volume
calculus. For many purposes, however, it is impractical to work in
charge density (sometimes simply
terms of discrete charges and we need to work with continuous charge
called charge density) is defined in a
distributions. For example, on the surface of a charged conductor, it is
similar manner:
impractical to specify the charge distribution in terms of the locations
of the microscopic charged constituents. It is more feasible to consider
Q
an area element ∆S (Fig. 1.24) on the surface of the conductor (which ∆
is very small on the macroscopic scale but big enough to include a very =
large number of electrons) and specify the charge ∆Q on that ρ
element. We then define a surface charge density σ at the area ∆V
element by where ∆Q is the charge included in
the macroscopically small volume
Q
∆
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element ∆V that includes a large number of microscopic charged at its centre. Divide the sphere into
constituents. The units for ρ are C/m3. small area elements, as shown in Fig.
The notion of continuous charge distribution is similar to that we 1.25.
adopt for continuous mass distribution in mechanics. When we refer The flux through an area element
to ∆S is
φ q
∆ = 4πε 0 r2 ∆S
ε ρ V ˆ
∆E = 4π1 0 r'∆2 r '
(1.29) since the magnitude of
where r′ is the distance between the charge element and P, and ˆr′ is a
a unit vector is 1.
unit vector in the direction from the charge element to P. By the
superposition principle, the total electric field due to the charge
distribution is obtained by summing over electric fields due to different The total flux through the sphere
volume elements: is obtained by adding up flux through
all the different area elements:
Note that ρ, r′, ˆr′ all can vary from point to point. In a strict
mathematical method, we should let ∆V→0 and the sum then
becomes an integral; but we omit that discussion here, for simplicity.
In short, using Coulomb’s law and the superposition principle, electric
field can be determined for any charge distribution, discrete or
continuous or part discrete and part continuous.
FIGURE 1.25 Flux through a sphere
1.14 GAUSS’S LAW enclosing a point charge q at its centre.
As a simple application of the notion of electric flux, let us consider the
total flux through a sphere of radius r, which encloses a point charge q
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εq
φ= Σall ∆S 4π 0 2 r ∆S
Since each area
element of the sphere is at the same distance r from the charge,
Σ∆= q
FIGURE 1.26 Calculation of theq φ =
S ε S
flux of uniform electric field 4πεo r2 all ∆S 4π 0 r2
through the surface of a cylinder. Now S, the total area of the sphere, equals 4πr2. Thus,
φ = q
×
π =4
4πε 2 r2 εq (1.30)
0r 0
S1 = S2 = S where S is the area of circular cross-section. Thus, the total flux is zero,
as expected by Gauss’s law. Thus, whenever you find that the net electric flux through a
closed surface is zero, we conclude that the total charge contained in the closed surface
is zero.
The great significance of Gauss’s law Eq. (1.31), is that it is true in general, and not
only for the simple cases we have considered above. Let us note some important points
regarding this law:
(i) Gauss’s law is true for any closed surface, no matter what its shape or size.
(ii) The term q on the right side of Gauss’s law, Eq. (1.31), includes the sum of all charges enclosed by
the surface. The charges may be located anywhere inside the surface.
(iii) In the situation when the surface is so chosen that there are some charges inside and some
outside, the electric field [whose flux appears on the left side of Eq. (1.31)] is due to all the
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charges, both inside and outside S. The term q on the right side of Gauss’s law, however,
represents only the total charge inside S.
(iv) The surface that we choose for the application of Gauss’s law is called the Gaussian surface. You
may choose any Gaussian surface and apply Gauss’s law. However, take care not to let the
Gaussian surface pass through any discrete charge. This is because electric field due to a system
of discrete charges is not well defined at the location of any charge. (As you go close to the
charge, the field grows without any bound.) However, the Gaussian surface can pass through a
continuous charge distribution.
(v) Gauss’s law is often useful towards a much easier calculation of the electrostatic field when the
system has some symmetry. This is facilitated by the choice of a suitable Gaussian surface.
(vi) Finally, Gauss’s law is based on the inverse square dependence ondistance contained in the
Coulomb’s law. Any violation of Gauss’s law will indicate departure from the inverse square law.
=
φ
R +
φ
L = ERa2 – ELa2 = a2 (ER – EL) = αa2 [(2a)1/2 – a1/2] = αa5/2 ( 2 –1)
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1.11
= 800 (0.1)5/2 ( 2 –1)
XAMPLE = 1.05 N m2 C–1
(b) We can use Gauss’s law to find the total charge q inside the cube.
ε φε
We have φ = q/ 0 or q = 0 . Therefore, q = 1.05 × 8.854 × 10–12 C = 9.27 × 10–12 C.
E
Example 1.12 An electric field is uniform, and in the positive x direction for positive x, and uniform with the same magnitude
but in the negative x direction for negative x. It is given that E = 200 ˆi N/C for x > 0 and E = –200 ˆi N/C for x < 0. A right circular
cylinder of length 20 cm and radius 5 cm has its centre at the origin and its axis along the x-axis so that one face is at x = +10 cm
and the other is at x = –10 cm (Fig. 1.28). (a) What is the net outward flux through each flat face? (b) What is the flux through
the side of the cylinder? (c) What is the net outward flux through the cylinder? (d) What is the net charge inside the cylinder?
Solution
ˆ
(a) We can see from the figure that on the left face E and ∆S are parallel. Therefore, the outward flux is φL= E.∆S = – 200 i
Si∆
ˆ
= + 200 ∆S, since i Si∆ = – ∆S
= + 200 × π (0.05)2 = + 1.57 N m2 C–1
φ
On the right face, E and ∆S are parallel and therefore R = E.∆S = + 1.57 N m2 C–1.
(b) For any point on the side of the cylinder E is perpendicular to ∆S and hence E.∆S = 0. Therefore, the flux out of the side
of the cylinder is zero.
φ
(c) Net outward flux through the cylinder = 1.57 + 1.57 + 0 = 3.14 N m2 C–1
FIGURE 1.28
ε
(d) The net charge within the cylinder can be found by using Gauss’s law which gives q = 0 φ
= 3.14 × 8.854 × 10–12 C
= 2.78 × 10–11 C
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the radial vector from O to P and rotate it around the
wire. The points P, P′, P′′ so obtained are completely
equivalent with respect to the charged wire. This implies
that the electric field must have the same magnitude at
these points. The direction of electric field at every point
must be radial (outward if λ > 0, inward if λ < 0). This is
clear from Fig. 1.29.
Consider a pair of line elements P 1 and P2 of the
wire, as shown. The electric fields produced by the two
elements of the pair when summed give a resultant
electric field which is radial (the components normal to
the radial vector cancel). This is true for any such pair
and hence the total field at any point P is radial. Finally,
since the wire is infinite, electric field does not depend
on the position of P along the length of the wire. In
short, the electric field is everywhere radial in the plane
cutting the wire normally, and its magnitude depends
only on the radial distance r.
To calculate the field, imagine a cylindrical Gaussian
surface, as shown in the Fig. 1.29(b). Since the field is
everywhere radial, flux through the two ends of the
cylindrical Gaussian surface is zero. At the cylindrical
part of the surface, E is normal to the surface at every
point, and its magnitude is constant, since it depends
only on r. The surface area of the curved part is 2πrl,
where l is the length of the cylinder.
= E × 2πrl
The surface includes charge equal to λ l. Gauss’s law then gives
E × 2πrl = λl/ε0
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λ
i.e., E = 2πε0r
Vectorially, E at any point is given by λ
ˆ
E = 2πε0r n (1.32)
where nˆ is the radial unit vector in the plane normal to the wire passing through the point. E is directed outward if
λ is positive and inward if λ is negative.
Note that when we write a vector A as a scalar multiplied by a unit vector, i.e., as A = A aˆ , the scalar A is an
algebraic number. It can be negative or positive. The direction of A will be the same as that of the unit vector aˆ if
A > 0 and opposite to aˆ if A < 0. When we want to restrict to non-negative values, we use the symbol A and call it
the modulus of A. Thus, A ≥0.
Also note that though only the charge enclosed by the surface (λl) was included above, the electric field E is
due to the charge on the entire wire. Further, the assumption that the wire is infinitely long is crucial. Without this
assumption, we cannot take E to be normal to the curved part of the cylindrical Gaussian surface. However, Eq.
(1.32) is approximately true for electric field around the central portions of a long wire, where the end effects may
be ignored.
where nˆ is a unit vector normal to the plane and going away from it.
E is directed away from the plate if σ is positive and toward the plate if σ is negative. Note that the above
application of the Gauss’ law has brought out an additional fact: E is independent of x also.
For a finite large planar sheet, Eq. (1.33) is approximately true in the middle regions of the planar sheet, away
from the ends.
1.15.3 Field due to a uniformly charged thin spherical shell Let σ be the uniform surface charge density of
a thin spherical shell of radius R (Fig. 1.31). The situation has obvious spherical symmetry. The field at any point P,
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outside or inside, can depend only on r (the radial distance from the centre of the shell to the point) and must be
radial (i.e.,
along the radius vector). The electric field is
(i) Field outside the shell: Consider a point P outside the shell with radius directed outward if q > 0 and
vector r. To calculate E at P, we take the Gaussian surface to be a sphere inward if q < 0. This, however,
of radius r and with centre O, passing through P. All points on this sphere is exactly the field produced
are equivalent relative to the given charged configuration. (That is what by a charge
we mean by spherical symmetry.) The electric field at each point of the
Gaussian surface, therefore, has the same magnitude E and is along the
radius vector at each point. Thus, E and ∆S at every point are parallel and
the flux through each element is E ∆S. Summing over all ∆S, the flux
through the Gaussian surface is E × 4 π r2. The charge enclosed is σ × 4 π R
2
. By Gauss’s law
2
πR
σ4 2
E × 4 π r = ε0
Or, E =σR2 q
= ε0 r 2 4πε0r2 where q = 4 π R2 σ is the total charge
on the spherical shell. Vectorially,
ˆ
ε0 r2 r
4πq (1.34) FIGURE 1.31 Gaussian surfaces
E=
for a point with (a) r > R, (b) r <
R.
q placed at the centre O. Thus for points outside the shell, the field due to a uniformly charged shell is as if the
entire charge of the shell is concentrated at its centre.
(ii) Field inside the shell: In Fig. 1.31(b), the point P is inside the shell. The Gaussian surface is again a sphere
through P centred at O.
The flux through the Gaussian surface, calculated as before, is E × 4 π r2. However, in this case, the Gaussian
surface encloses no charge. Gauss’s law then gives E × 4 π r2 = 0
i.e., E = 0 (r < R )(1.35) that is, the field due to a uniformly charged thin shell is zero at all points inside the
shell*. This important result is a direct consequence of Gauss’s law which follows from Coulomb’s law. The
experimental verification of this result confirms the 1/r2 dependence in Coulomb’s law.
Example 1.13 An early model for an atom considered it to have a positively charged point nucleus of charge Ze,
surrounded by a uniform density of negative charge up to a radius R. The atom as a whole is neutral. For this model,
what is the electric field at a distance r from the nucleus?
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FIGURE 1.32
Solution The charge distribution for this model of the atom is as shown in Fig. 1.32. The total negative charge in the
uniform spherical charge distribution of radius R must be –Z e, since the atom (nucleus of charge Z e + negative charge)
is neutral. This immediately gives us the negative charge density ρ, since we must have
4πR3 ρ=0–Ze 3 or ρ=−43πZeR3
To find the electric field E(r) at a point P which is a distance r away from the nucleus, we use Gauss’s law. Because of
the spherical symmetry of the charge distribution, the magnitude of the electric field E(r) depends only on the radial
distance, no matter what the direction of r. Its direction is along (or opposite to) the radius vector r from the origin to
the point P. The obvious Gaussian surface is a spherical surface centred at the nucleus. We consider two situations,
namely, r < R and r > R.
(i) r < R : The electric flux φ enclosed by the spherical surface is φ = E (r) × 4 π r2
where E (r) is the magnitude of the electric field at r. This is because
* Compare this with a uniform mass shell discussed in Section 8.5 of Class XI Textbook of Physics.
the field at any point on the spherical Gaussian surface has the same direction as the
normal to the surface there, and has the same magnitude at all points on the
surface.
The charge q enclosed by the Gaussian surface is the positive nuclear charge and the
negative charge within the sphere of radius r,
4πr3
i.e., q = Z e + ρ
3
Substituting for the charge density ρ obtained earlier, we have
r3 q
=Ze−Ze 3
R
Gauss’s law then gives,
E
Er( )= Z er12 − Rr3 ;r < R XAMPLE
4 πε0
The electric field is directed radially outward.
1.13
(ii) r > R: In this case, the total charge enclosed by the Gaussian spherical surface is
zero since the atom is neutral. Thus, from Gauss’s law,
E (r) × 4 π r2 = 0 or E (r) = 0; r > R
At r = R, both cases give the same result: E = 0.
ON SYMMETRY OPERATIONS
In Physics, we often encounter systems with various symmetries. Consideration of these symmetries helps one
arrive at results much faster than otherwise by a straightforward calculation. Consider, for example an infinite
uniform sheet of charge (surface charge density σ) along the y-z plane. This system is unchanged if (a) translated
parallel to the y-z plane in any direction, (b) rotated about the x-axis through any angle. As the system is
unchanged under such symmetry operation, so must its properties be. In particular, in this example, the electric
field E must be unchanged.
Translation symmetry along the y-axis shows that the electric field must be the same at a point (0, y1, 0) as at
(0, y2, 0). Similarly translational symmetry along the z-axis shows that the electric field at two point (0, 0, z1) and (0,
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0, z2) must be the same. By using rotation symmetry around the x-axis, we can conclude that E must be
perpendicular to the y-z plane, that is, it must be parallel to the x-direction.
Try to think of a symmetry now which will tell you that the magnitude of the electric field is a constant,
independent of the x-coordinate. It thus turns out that the magnitude of the electric field due to a uniformly
charged infinite conducting sheet is the same at all points in space. The direction, however, is opposite of each
other on either side of the sheet.
Compare this with the effort needed to arrive at this result by a direct calculation using Coulomb’s law.
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SUMMARY
1. Electric and magnetic forces determine the properties of atoms, molecules and
bulk matter.
2. From simple experiments on frictional electricity, one can infer that there are two
types of charges in nature; and that like charges repel and unlike charges attract. By
convention, the charge on a glass rod rubbed with silk is positive; that on a plastic
rod rubbed with fur is then negative.
3. Conductors allow movement of electric charge through them, insulators do not. In
metals, the mobile charges are electrons; in electrolytes both positive and negative
ions are mobile.
4. Electric charge has three basic properties: quantisation, additivity and
conservation.
Quantisation of electric charge means that total charge (q) of a body is always an
integral multiple of a basic quantum of charge (e) i.e., q = n e, where n = 0, ±1, ±2,
±3, .... Proton and electron have charges +e, –e, respectively. For macroscopic
charges for which n is a very large number, quantisation of charge can be ignored.
Additivity of electric charges means that the total charge of a system is the
algebraic sum (i.e., the sum taking into account proper signs) of all individual
charges in the system.
Conservation of electric charges means that the total charge of an isolated system
remains unchanged with time. This means that when bodies are charged through
friction, there is a transfer of electric charge from one body to another, but no creation
or destruction of charge. 5. Coulomb’s Law: The mutual electrostatic force between two
point charges q1 and q2 is proportional to the product q1q2 and inversely proportional to
the square of the distance r21 separating them. Mathematically,
k (q q1 2) ˆr21 F21 =
q =
force on q2 due to 1 2
r21
where ˆr21 is a unit vector in the direction from q1 to q2 and k = is the constant
of proportionality.
In SI units, the unit of charge is coulomb. The experimental value of the constant ε0
is ε0 = 8.854 × 10–12 C2 N–1 m–2
The approximate value of k is k = 9 ×
109 N m2 C–2
6. The ratio of electric force and gravitational force between a proton and an electron
is
2
ke ≅ 2 .4 × 10 G
39
m me p
7. Superposition Principle: The principle is based on the property that the forces with
which two charges attract or repel each other are not affected by the presence of a
third (or more) additional charge(s). For an assembly of charges q1, q2, q3, ..., the
force on any charge, say q1, is
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the vector sum of the force on q1 due to q2, the force on q1 due to q3, and so on.
For each pair, the force is given by the Coulomb’s law for two charges stated
earlier.
8. The electric field E at a point due to a charge configuration is the force on a small
positive test charge q placed at the point divided by the magnitude of the charge.
ε
Electric field due to a point charge q has a magnitude |q|/4π 0r2; it is radially
outwards from q, if q is positive, and radially inwards if q is negative. Like Coulomb
force, electric field also satisfies superposition principle.
9. An electric field line is a curve drawn in such a way that the tangent at each point
on the curve gives the direction of electric field at that point. The relative closeness
of field lines indicates the relative strength of electric field at different points; they
crowd near each other in regions of strong electric field and are far apart where the
electric field is weak. In regions of constant electric field, the field lines are
uniformly spaced parallel straight lines.
10. Some of the important properties of field lines are: (i) Field lines are continuous
curves without any breaks. (ii) Two field lines cannot cross each other. (iii)
Electrostatic field lines start at positive charges and end at negative charges —they
cannot form closed loops.
11. An electric dipole is a pair of equal and opposite charges q and –q separated by
some distance 2a. Its dipole moment vector p has magnitude 2qa and is in the
direction of the dipole axis from –q to q.
12. Field of an electric dipole in its equatorial plane (i.e., the plane perpendicular to its
axis and passing through its centre) at a distance r from the centre:
2 pr
E = 4 πε0(r2 − a2 2)
for r a
3
The 1/r dependence of dipole electric fields should be noted in contrast to the 1/r
2
dependence of electric field due to a point charge.
13. In a uniform electric field E, a dipole experiences a torque ττττ given by ττττ = p × E
but experiences no net force.
14. The flux ∆φ of electric field E through a small area element ∆S is given by
∆φ = E.∆S
The vector area element ∆S is
∆S = ∆S nˆ
where ∆S is the magnitude of the area element and nˆ is normal to the area
element, which can be considered planar for sufficiently small ∆S.
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nˆ λ
E =
2 πε0 r
where r is the perpendicular distance of the point from the wire and
nˆ is the radial unit vector in the plane normal to the wire passing
through the point.
(ii) Infinite thin plane sheet of uniform surface charge density σ
σ
E =
2 ε0
nˆ
where nˆ is a unit vector normal to the plane, outward on either side. (iii) Thin
spherical shell of uniform surface charge density σ
q ˆr (r ≥ R)
E =
4
π ε 0 r2
E=0 (r < R)
where r is the distance of the point from the centre of the shell and R the radius of
the shell. q is the total charge of the shell: q = 4πR2σ.
The electric field outside the shell is as though the total charge is concentrated at
the centre. The same result is true for a solid sphere of uniform volume charge
density. The field is zero at all points inside the shell
Physical quantity Symbol Dimensions Unit Remarks
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POINTS TO PONDER
1. You might wonder why the protons, all carrying positive charges, are compactly
residing inside the nucleus. Why do they not fly away? You will learn that there is a
third kind of a fundamental force, called the strong force which holds them
together. The range of distance where this force is effective is, however, very small
~10-14 m. This is precisely the size of the nucleus. Also the electrons are not allowed
to sit on top of the protons, i.e. inside the nucleus, due to the laws of quantum
mechanics. This gives the atoms their structure as they exist in nature.
2. Coulomb force and gravitational force follow the same inverse-square law. But
gravitational force has only one sign (always attractive), while Coulomb force can
be of both signs (attractive and repulsive), allowing possibility of cancellation of
electric forces. This is how gravity, despite being a much weaker force, can be a
dominating and more pervasive force in nature.
3. The constant of proportionality k in Coulomb’s law is a matter of choice if the unit
of charge is to be defined using Coulomb’s law. In SI units, however, what is
defined is the unit of current (A) via its magnetic effect (Ampere’s law) and the unit
of charge (coulomb) is simply defined by (1C = 1 A s). In this case, the value of k is
no longer arbitrary; it is approximately 9 × 109 N m2 C–2.
4. The rather large value of k, i.e., the large size of the unit of charge (1C) from the
point of view of electric effects arises because (as mentioned in point 3 already) the
unit of charge is defined in terms of magnetic forces (forces on current–carrying
wires) which are generally much weaker than the electric forces. Thus while 1
ampere is a unit of reasonable size for magnetic effects, 1 C = 1 A s, is too big a unit
for electric effects.
5. The additive property of charge is not an ‘obvious’ property. It is related to the fact
that electric charge has no direction associated with it; charge is a scalar.
6. Charge is not only a scalar (or invariant) under rotation; it is also invariant for
frames of reference in relative motion. This is not always true for every scalar. For
example, kinetic energy is a scalar under rotation, but is not invariant for frames of
reference in relative motion.
7. Conservation of total charge of an isolated system is a property independent of the
scalar nature of charge noted in point 6. Conservation refers to invariance in time
in a given frame of reference. A quantity may be scalar but not conserved (like
kinetic energy in an inelastic collision). On the other hand, one can have conserved
vector quantity (e.g., angular momentum of an isolated system).
8. Quantisation of electric charge is a basic (unexplained) law of nature; interestingly,
there is no analogous law on quantisation of mass.
9. Superposition principle should not be regarded as ‘obvious’, or equated with the
law of addition of vectors. It says two things: force on one charge due to another
charge is unaffected by the presence of other charges, and there are no additional
three-body, four-body, etc., forces which arise only when there are more than two
charges.
10. The electric field due to a discrete charge configuration is not defined at the
locations of the discrete charges. For continuous volume charge distribution, it is
defined at any point in the distribution. For a surface charge distribution, electric
field is discontinuous across the surface.
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11. The electric field due to a charge configuration with total charge zero is not zero; but for distances large compared to the
size of the configuration, its field falls off faster than 1/r 2, typical of field due to a single charge. An electric dipole is the
simplest example of this fact.
EXERCISES
1.1 What is the force between two small charged spheres having charges of 2 × 10 –7C and 3 × 10–7C placed 30 cm apart in air?
1.2 The electrostatic force on a small sphere of charge 0.4 µC due to another small sphere of charge –0.8 µC in air is 0.2 N. (a)
What is the distance between the two spheres? (b) What is the force on the second sphere due to the first?
1.3 Check that the ratio ke2/G memp is dimensionless. Look up a Table of Physical Constants and determine the value of this
ratio. What does the ratio signify?
1.4 (a) Explain the meaning of the statement ‘electric charge of a body is quantised’.
(b) Why can one ignore quantisation of electric charge when dealing with macroscopic i.e., large scale charges?
1.5 When a glass rod is rubbed with a silk cloth, charges appear on both. A similar phenomenon is observed with many
other pairs of bodies. Explain how this observation is consistent with the law of conservation of charge.
1.6 Four point charges qA = 2 µC, qB = –5 µC, qC = 2 µC, and qD = –5 µC are located at the corners of a square ABCD of side 10 cm.
What is the force on a charge of 1 µC placed at the centre of the square?
1.7 (a) An electrostatic field line is a continuous curve. That is, a field line cannot have sudden breaks. Why not?
(b) Explain why two field lines never cross each other at any point?
1.8 Two point charges qA = 3 µC and qB = –3 µC are located 20 cm apart in vacuum.
(a) What is the electric field at the midpoint O of the line AB joining the two charges?
(b) If a negative test charge of magnitude 1.5 × 10 –9 C is placed at this point, what is the force experienced by the
test charge?
1.9 A system has two charges qA = 2.5 × 10–7 C and qB = –2.5 × 10–7 C located at points A: (0, 0, –15 cm) and B:
(0,0, +15 cm), respectively. What are the total charge and electric dipole moment of the system?
1.10 An electric dipole with dipole moment 4 × 10 –9 C m is aligned at 30° with the direction of a uniform electric
field of magnitude 5 × 104 NC–1. Calculate the magnitude of the torque acting on the dipole.
1.11 A polythene piece rubbed with wool is found to have a negative charge of 3 × 10 –7 C.
(a) Estimate the number of electrons transferred (from which to which?)
(b) Is there a transfer of mass from wool to polythene?
1.12 (a) Two insulated charged copper spheres A and B have their centres separated by a distance of 50 cm. What is the mutual
force of electrostatic repulsion if the charge on each is 6.5 × 10 –7 C? The radii of A and B are negligible compared
to the distance of separation.
(b) What is the force of repulsion if each sphere is charged double the above amount, and the distance between them
is halved?
1.13 Suppose the spheres A and B in Exercise 1.12 have identical sizes. A third sphere of the same size but uncharged is brought
in contact with the first, then brought in contact with the second, and finally removed from both. What is the new
force of repulsion between A and B?
1.14 Figure 1.33 shows tracks of three charged particles in a uniform electrostatic field. Give the signs of the three charges.
Which particle has the highest charge to mass ratio?
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FIGURE 1.33
1.15 Consider a uniform electric field E = 3 × 10 3 î N/C. (a) What is the flux of this field through a square of 10 cm on a side
whose plane is parallel to the yz plane? (b) What is the flux through the same square if the normal to its plane makes
a 60° angle with the x-axis?
1.16 What is the net flux of the uniform electric field of Exercise 1.15 through a cube of side 20 cm oriented so that its faces are
parallel to the coordinate planes?
1.17 Careful measurement of the electric field at the surface of a black box indicates that the net outward flux through the
surface of the box is 8.0 × 103 Nm2/C. (a) What is the net charge inside the box? (b) If the net outward flux through the
surface of the box were zero, could you conclude that there were no charges inside the box? Why or Why not?
1.18 A point charge +10 µC is a distance 5 cm directly above the centre of a square of side 10 cm, as shown in Fig. 1.34. What is
the magnitude of the electric flux through the square? (Hint: Think of the square as one face of a cube with edge 10
cm.)
FIGURE 1.34
1.19 A point charge of 2.0 µC is at the centre of a cubic Gaussian surface 9.0 cm on edge. What is the net electric flux through
the surface?
1.20 A point charge causes an electric flux of –1.0 × 10 3 Nm2/C to pass through a spherical Gaussian surface of 10.0 cm radius
centred on the charge. (a) If the radius of the Gaussian surface were doubled, how much flux would pass through the
surface? (b) What is the value of the point charge?
1.21 A conducting sphere of radius 10 cm has an unknown charge. If the electric field 20 cm from the centre of the sphere is 1.5
× 103 N/C and points radially inward, what is the net charge on the sphere?
1.22 A uniformly charged conducting sphere of 2.4 m diameter has a surface charge density of 80.0 µC/m2. (a) Find the charge
on the sphere. (b) What is the total electric flux leaving the surface of the sphere?
1.23 An infinite line charge produces a field of 9 × 104 N/C at a distance of 2 cm. Calculate the linear charge density.
1.24 Two large, thin metal plates are parallel and close to each other. On their inner faces, the plates have surface charge
densities of opposite signs and of magnitude 17.0 × 10 –22 C/m2. What is E: (a) in the outer region of the first plate, (b)
in the outer region of the second plate, and (c) between the plates?
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ADDITIONAL EXERCISES
1.25 An oil drop of 12 excess electrons is held stationary under a constant electric field of 2.55 × 10 4 NC–1 in Millikan’s oil drop
experiment. The density of the oil is 1.26 g cm–3. Estimate the radius of the drop. (g = 9.81 m s–2; e = 1.60 × 10–19 C).
1.26 Which among the curves shown in Fig. 1.35 cannot possibly represent electrostatic field lines?
1.27 In a certain region of space, electric field is along the z-direction throughout. The magnitude of electric field is, however,
not constant but increases uniformly along the positive z-direction, at the rate of 10 5 NC–1 per metre. What are the
force and torque experienced by a system having a total dipole moment equal to 10 –7 Cm in the negative z-direction ?
1.28 (a) A conductor A with a cavity as shown in Fig. 1.36(a) is given a charge Q. Show that the entire charge must appear on
the outer surface of the conductor. (b) Another conductor B with charge q is inserted into the cavity keeping B
insulated from A. Show that the total charge on the outside surface of A is Q + q [Fig. 1.36(b)]. (c) A sensitive
instrument is to be shielded from the strong electrostatic fields in its environment. Suggest a possible way.
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1.29A hollow charged conductor has a tiny hole cut into its surface.
ε
Show that the electric field in the hole is (σ/2 0) nˆ , where nˆ is the unit vector in the outward normal direction, and
σ is the surface charge density near the hole.
1.30 Obtain the formula for the electric field due to a long thin wire of uniform linear charge density λ without using
Gauss’s law. [Hint: Use Coulomb’s law directly and evaluate the necessary integral.]
1.31 It is now believed that protons and neutrons (which constitute nuclei of ordinary matter) are themselves built out of more
elementary units called quarks. A proton and a neutron consist of three quarks each. Two types of quarks, the so
called ‘up’ quark (denoted by u) of charge
+ (2/3) e, and the ‘down’ quark (denoted by d) of charge (–1/3) e, together with electrons build up ordinary matter.
(Quarks of other types have also been found which give rise to different unusual varieties of matter.) Suggest a
possible quark composition of a proton and neutron.
1.32 (a) Consider an arbitrary electrostatic field configuration. A small test charge is placed at a null point (i.e., where E = 0) of
the configuration. Show that the equilibrium of the test charge is necessarily unstable.
(b) Verify this result for the simple configuration of two charges of the same magnitude and sign placed a certain
distance apart.
1.33 A particle of mass m and charge (–q) enters the region between the two charged plates initially moving along x-axis with
speed vx (like particle 1 in Fig. 1.33). The length of plate is L and an uniform electric field E is maintained between the
plates. Show that the vertical deflection of the particle at the far edge of the plate is qEL2/(2m vx2).
Compare this motion with motion of a projectile in gravitational field discussed in Section 4.10 of Class XI Textbook of
Physics.
1.34 Suppose that the particle in Exercise in 1.33 is an electron projected with velocity vx = 2.0 × 106 m s–1. If E between the
plates separated by 0.5 cm is 9.1 × 10 2 N/C, where will the electron strike the upper plate? (|e|=1.6 × 10–19 C, me = 9.1
× 10–31 kg.)
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