Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revision Previous revision Next revision | Previous revision | ||
184_notes:line_fields [2018/09/12 15:13] – [Building Electric Field for Lines of Charge] dmcpadden | 184_notes:line_fields [2021/02/13 18:58] (current) – [Building Electric Field for Lines of Charge] bartonmo | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Sections 15.1-15.2 in Matter and Interactions (4th edition) | Sections 15.1-15.2 in Matter and Interactions (4th edition) | ||
- | [[184_notes: | + | /*[[184_notes: |
+ | |||
+ | [[184_notes: | ||
===== Electric Field and Potential for Lines of Charge ===== | ===== Electric Field and Potential for Lines of Charge ===== | ||
- | [[184_projects:s18_project_3|In your project last week]], you modeled a line of charge as seven point charges and used [[184_notes: | + | In the previous notes, we talked about how to add fields using [[184_notes:superposition|superposition]], which can be greatly aided by the [[184_notes: |
{{youtube> | {{youtube> | ||
Line 13: | Line 15: | ||
So one way we could model the piece of tape would be to model it as two point charges - each point charge with half the total charge of the tape. In this case the electric field at Point A would be given by: →Etot=→E1+→E2. Here we have to calculate the electric field twice (find the different →r, find the magnitude of r, and calculate →E), but we get a better model. Now this might not be a great model for a line - but it's better than one point. We could make this model even better if we divided it into 4 point charges, spread out over the length of the tape, each with an amount of charge Q/4. Then the field would be given by →Etot=→E1+→E2+→E3+→E4. We have to do more work computationally, | So one way we could model the piece of tape would be to model it as two point charges - each point charge with half the total charge of the tape. In this case the electric field at Point A would be given by: →Etot=→E1+→E2. Here we have to calculate the electric field twice (find the different →r, find the magnitude of r, and calculate →E), but we get a better model. Now this might not be a great model for a line - but it's better than one point. We could make this model even better if we divided it into 4 point charges, spread out over the length of the tape, each with an amount of charge Q/4. Then the field would be given by →Etot=→E1+→E2+→E3+→E4. We have to do more work computationally, | ||
- | [{{ 184_notes: | + | [{{ 184_notes: |
- | However, to make the best model of this line of charge, we would need to split the line into extremely small pieces of charge or infinitesimally small pieces of charge, which in calculus notation, we would write as dQ. We can then find the electric field at Point A due to only that small piece of charge - this would be "a little bit of electric field" since it comes from "a little bit of charge", | + | However, to make the best model of this line of charge, we would need to split the line into extremely small pieces of charge or infinitesimally small pieces of charge, which in calculus notation, we would write as dQ. We can then find the electric field at Point A due to only that small piece of charge - this would be "a little bit of electric field" since it comes from "a little bit of charge", |
→dE=14πϵ0dQr2ˆr=14πϵ0dQr3→r | →dE=14πϵ0dQr2ˆr=14πϵ0dQr3→r | ||