Gauss's Law & Potential: Flux of An Electric Field
Gauss's Law & Potential: Flux of An Electric Field
In the figure above we see electric field lines passing through a surface S, the direction of the electric
field making an angle with the normal to the surface. The flux of the electric field is defined as
. In performing the sum, one has to know the electric field at every point on the surface and
the angle that the field makes with the outward normal at that point. If the electric field is constant,
.
the flux becomes
Solid Angle :
We are familiar with the concept of an angle in two dimensions. Loosely speaking an agle is a measure
of divergence or spread between two straight lines. Suppose the lines meet at the point O. With O as
the centre, if we draw arc of a circle of radius R, the two straight lines will contain an arc of the circle
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The measure of the angle (in radian measure) is then the ratio of the length L of the arc to the
radius of the circle.
Note that the circular arc is along the transverse direction to the two lines. Suppose, instead,
we draw an arbitrary curve (shown in red) which cuts the two lines, the length L is to be taken along
the transverse projection of this curve. Note that, being ratio of two lengths, an angle is
dimensionless. However, we conventionally measure it in terms of a unit which could be a degree
or a radian or a grade.
The concept of solid angle is straightforward extension of this concept in three dimensions. Solid angle is
the angle that an arbitrary area makes at a point. What is to be done is to describe a right circular
cone of length R about the point P. The ratio of the transverse area intercepted by the cone to the
square of the distance from the point P is a measure of the solid angle. Like in the case of angle in
two dimensions, we have to take a transverse area. Like ordinary angle, a solid angle is
dimensionless but is measured in a unit called steradian
d=
dS dS cos
=
r2
r2
Consider a surface S. What is the solid angle subtended by the surface at the point P. We draw tangents
from P to the edge of the surface. If the surface area is transverse (i.e. the area is a part of the
sphere intercepted by such tangents), the solid angle is simply the ratio of the part of the sphere
intercepted by the tangents to the distance squared. For other surface, transverse projections have
to be taken.
Example : Calculate the flux of a constant electric field through a right circular cone of height H and
semi angle of cone .
2
dl
Consider a surface element on the cone at a depth h below the apex. The area element has a slanted
with the surface of the cone. If
length dl. The outward normal to the element makes an angle
the radius of the circle which the element makes is r, the flux due to this element is
and
. This is the flux through the slanted surface of the cone. The flux through
the base of the cone is simple to calculate since the direction of the outward normal is opposite to
the direction of the base. Since the field is uniform, the net flux through the base is
Example 2 : Flux through the surface of a sphere due to an electric charge q placed at its centre.
The electric field due to the charge is
outward, we have
Gausss law :
Consider the following situations. Suppose we have a volume of arbitrary shape defined by a surface S
with a charge q embedded therein. Infinitesimal surface area dS at a position with respect to the
charge. The surface element makes a solid angle
at the position of the charge. The electric field
at dS due to the charge q is along the radial direction and is given by
. If the angle
is the
between the normal to the element and the position vector is , then
projection of dS along a direction perpendicular to . Thus the flux of the electric field out of this
element is
depends on the solid angle that it subtends at the position of the charge. Since the charge is
embedded inside, at every place on the surface, the radial direction is outward and the normal to
the surface makes an acute angle with the radial direction at that point. Thus the total flux in this
situation is given by
outside. Using superposition principle, one can, by very similar argument, conclude that for multiple
charges the result would be true as well, and we then have,
This is Gausss law. It may be noticed that our argument had nothing to do with whether the surface is a
physical surface or not. Any surface, whether real or imaginary, through which flux of a vector field
such as an electric field or a gravitational field, is calculated is called a Gaussian surface
We can extend this to the case of a continuous charge distribution as well. Using the divergence
theorem, we have
Since the relationship above is true for an arbitrary volume, we get from the above, the differential form
of Gausss law:
Here the field is being calculated at the position due to a charge distribution, the integrated variable
being represented by primed quantities. Taking divergence of both sides, we get, (the divergence being
calculated with respect to the unprimed variable, we can take it inside the integration)
Notice that the quantity within the parentheses, whose divergence is being taken, depends on the
difference
. Hence we can, instead, take the divergence with respect to the primed variable by
(where again, there is no minus sign as the gradient is with respect to the primed variable). Thus, we
have,
We will now calculate the flux in a few cases using Gausss law.
Example 1 :
A cube of side a has a charge q located at one of its corners. Calculate the flux of the electric field
through the shaded side.
Suppose we have a cube where a charge was embedded at its centre. By symmetry the flux out of each
side would have been the same and from each side one sixth of the total flux would have emerged. The
total flux out of such a cube, by Gausss law, would have been
then be
In the present case, the charge being at the corner, such simplistic argument does not hold. What we
can do is to imagine eight identical cubes being stacked so as to make a cube of side 2a with the charge
now being at the centre of such a cube. Remember that the Gaussian surfaces do not have to be real.
The flux from the side which contains the shaded portion is
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Further, the shaded face of the smaller cube being one fourth of the face with side 2a, the flux out of
the original face is
.
( There is another way of getting this result. The point charge being at one of the corners of the cube can
be thought of as contributing only one eighth of its charge to the cube in question because each corner
could be shared by eight cubes. So the flux out of the cube would have been
adjacent sides do not have any flux coming out because the electric field is along the face while the
normal to the face is perpendicular. The three non-adjacent sides, which are symmetrical share this flux
equally giving the flux from each side to be
.)
Example 2 :
Field due to a uniformly charged sphere of radius R
To determine the field at a distance r from the centre, draw a Gaussian sphere of radius r concentric
with the given sphere. The strength of the electric field is the same everywhere on the Gaussian
surface and points radially outward. The flux is given by
.
For
the Gaussian surface encloses all the charge Q in the given sphere. Thus in this case
For
case,
Thus, the field is linear with distance, inside the sphere, falling off quadratically outside.
for
r
a
ra
E=k
r
0r 2
8
r
a
4=
r 2 dr k
(r a)
Since the fields are perpendicular to the sheet, the flux from the curved surface of the cylinder is zero.
The net flux out of the cylinder from the two caps is
. The amount of charge enclosed is .
, which gives the field magnitude to be given
, directed upward for points above the sheet and downward for points below. Note that the
Tutorial Assignment :
1. A constant electric field passes through the surface of an open hemisphere, perpendicular to its
base. Calculate the flux through the curved surface.
2. A charge distribution gives rise to an electric field
3. Since the charge density is spherically symmetric, the electric field also is. It follows that
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This gives,
5. For r < a, the Gaussian surface to be a cylinder of radius r and length . The amount of charged
. The flux is only due to the
curved surface because by cylindrical symmetry, the electrical field lines are perpendicular to
, which gives,
.
. The electric field is
3. Consider a semi-infinite slab of thickness 2d containing a uniform positive charge density . Find the
electric field both within and outside the slab.
4. Repeat problem (2) with the charge density inside the slab being given by
is
.
3. Let the faces be parallel to the xy plane and located at
. There is no preferred direction
in the xy plane and the field must point only in the z direction. However, for z=0 we cannot
single out either positive direction of z nor negative direction. Thus in this plane the field must
be zero.
For evaluating field for a general value of z, consider a Gaussian surface of area A one end of
which is on the z=0 plane and the other end at an arbitrary value of z. For
The amount of
charge contained within the surface is
The field on the z=0 plane is zero. The field at z is
. Thus
For
4. The charge density is an even function of z. The magnitude of E must also be even function of z.
However, the direction of the field is in +z direction for z >0 and along z direction for negative
z. Hence, the field in the z=0 plane must be zero.
Once again, take a Gaussian cylinder with its base perpendicular to the xy plane with one end in
z=0 plane and the other end at an arbitrary z (figure shows the cylinder to extend beyond the
slab with z>d, but one can draw similar picture for z<d). Take z<d. To determine the charge
enclosed take a cylindrical element of width dz at height z. The charge in this element is
dz
z>0 and along negative zdirection for z<0.For z>d, the charge can be calculated in a similar
fashion but the integral limits are from z=0 to d, which gives, the charge contained to be
which gives the electric field magnitude to be
R. The charge
radially outward, giving the contribution to the flux from the curved surface of the cylinder. The
flux is
6.
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