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Return to Electric Flux and Area Vectors notes
Example: Flux through a Tilted Surface
Suppose you have a uniform electric field →E=8 V/m ˆx. There is a tilted rectangular surface with dimensions 3 m (perpendicular to the field), and 5 m (at an angle of θ=30∘ to field). What is the electric flux through the surface?
Facts
- →E=8 V/m ˆx
- The surface is a rectangle 3 m by 3 m.
- The surface is tilted at an angle of 30∘ to the field.
Lacking
- Φe
- →A
Approximations & Assumptions
- The electric field is constant.
- The surface is flat.
- The electric flux through the surface is due only to →E.
Representations
- We represent the electric flux through a flat surface with:
Φ=→E∙→A
- We represent the situation with the following diagram. Note that the top of the rectangle aligns along the z-direction, but we represent using a perspective that also shows area. The little coordinate axes drawn may be unfamiliar. The circle with the dot simply means that the +z-axis comes straight out of the page. A circle with an X would mean into the page. Just think of an arrow either seen head-on (all you see is the point), or seen from behind (you see the feathers).
Solution
In order to find electric flux, we must first find →A. Remember in the notes on flux that area can be a vector when we define it as a cross product of width and length vectors. Here, we can use the following for width and length, with width being the top of the rectangle, and pointing out of the page, and length being the longer side, and pointing at an upwards angle: →w=3 m ˆz