Physics 121: Electricity & Magnetism - Lecture 3 Electric Field
Physics 121: Electricity & Magnetism - Lecture 3 Electric Field
Physics 121: Electricity & Magnetism - Lecture 3 Electric Field
Magnetism – Lecture 3
Electric Field
Dale E. Gary
Wenda Cao
NJIT Physics Department
Electric Force and Field Force
What? -- Action on a
distance
How? – Electric Field
Why? – Field Force
Where? – in the
space surrounding
charges
Electric field – E (r )
Magnetic field – B (r )
A. It is unaffected.
B. It reverses direction.
C. It changes in a way that cannot be determined.
Situation Value
Inside a copper wire of household circuits 10-2 N/C
Near a charged comb 103 N/C
Inside a TV picture tube 105 N/C
Near the charged drum of a photocopier 105 N/C
Electric breakdown across an air gap 3×106 N/C
At the electron’s orbit in a hydrogen atom 5×1011 N/C
On the suface of a Uranium nucleus 3×1021 N/C
A. B.
C. D. E.
1 Qq0
F rˆ
4 0 r 2
B
F 1 Q
E rˆ Q A
q0 4 0 r 2
r
q0
Direction is radial: outward for +|Q|
inward for -|Q|
Magnitude: constant on any spherical
shell
Flux through any shell enclosing Q is
the same: EAAA = EBAB
F0 F01 F02 F
E ... 0 n
q0 q0 q0 q0
E1 E2 ... En
1 qi
E
4 0
i r 2 rˆi
i
If d << z, then,
d 2 d 2d 2d 2d
[(1 ) (1 ) 2 ] [(1 ...) (1 ...)]
2z 2z 2 z (1!) 2 z (1!) z
So q 2d 1 qd
E
4 0 z 2 z 2 0 z 3
p qd
E ~ 1/z3
1 p
E =>0 as d =>0
E Valid for “far field”
2 0 z 3
September 18, 2007
Electric Field of a Continuous Charge
Distribution
1 q
Find an expression for dq:
E rˆ dq = λdl for a line distribution
4 0 r 2
dq = σdA for a surface distribution
dq = ρdV for a volume distribution
1 qi Represent field contributions at P
i r 2 rˆi
E
4 0 i
due to point charges dq located in
the distribution. Use symmetry,
dq
dE rˆ
1 q 1 dq 4 0 r 2
E lim 2 i rˆi rˆ
4 0 q 0
i ri 4 0 r 2
Add up (integrate the contributions)
over the whole distribution, varying
the displacement as needed,
E dE
Start with
dq dx
1 dq 1 dx
dE
then, 4 0 x 2 4 0 x 2
l a l a
dx l a dx 1
E
a
4 0 x 2 4 0 a x 2 4 0 x a
So Finalize
1 Q1 1 Q l => 0 ?
E
4 0 l a l a 4 0 a (l a ) a >> l ?
A) EC>EB>EA .C
B) EB>EC>EA
C) EA>EC>EB
D) EB>EA>EC .A
E) EA>EB>EC
Then
F qE and p qd
So
| | pE sin
p E
pE[ cos ]if pE (cos i cos f )
Choose
U i 0 at i 90
So
U pE cos
U pE
September 18, 2007
4. In which configuration, the potential energy of the
dipole is the greatest?
a b c
E
d e
Electric field lines provide a means for visualizing the direction and magnitude of electric fields. The
electric field vector at any point is tangent to a field line through that point. The density of field lines in
any region is proportional to the magnitude of the electric field in that region.
Field lines originate on positive charge andF terminate
1 Q on negative charge.
E rˆ
Field due to a point charge: q0 4 0 r 2
Field due to a continuous charge distribution: treat charge elements as point charges and then summing
via inegration, the electric field vectors produced
by all
the charge elements.
Force on a point charge in an electric field: F qE
Dipole in an electric field:
The field exerts a torque on the dipole
p E
The dipole has a potential energy U associated with orientation in the field
its
U pE