PH 316 Fall 2000 Estimated Schedule and Topics
Thursday Aug 31
Most of chapter 1 will be covered as needed, but not all
at the beginning
Binomial series
(needed on Friday or Monday)
dot product (needed
for Thurs HW)
coordinate systems --- rectangular, cylindrical,
spherical
surface area element in each one
volume element in each one
general displacement dr in each one
Collect student class work for the above
Coulomb's law and E = F/q
- F12 = k q1 q2 / r^2, where k = 9 x 10^9 Nm^2/C^2 = 1/(4
pi epsilon_o)
- E(at 2 due to 1) =F12/q2 = k q1/r^2
- E due to a point charge q = kq/r^2
- E due to distinct charges - sum over terms, take
account of x,y, z components
- collect in-class calculation
Friday Sep 1
Mon Sept 4.
Homework due today
- Prob 1.3 (dot product) p. 7
- Prob 1.4 (cross product) p. 7
- Prob 2.6 (electric field on axis of a uniformly charged
disk, started in class) p. 64
We want to show that electric potential V is connected
to electric field E via E = - grad
V
In the text, Griffiths uses a script r [p. 60 and other places].
The sketch below indicates I will be using s instead of script r.
- gradient of a scalar
function
- dr = r^ dr + theta^ r d theta +phi^
r sin theta d phi (spherical polar)
- in class: use df = grad f . dr to work
out the gradient in xyz.
- start from df = grad f . dr and work out
the gradient operator in cylindrical and spherical coordinates [collect
in class 1/2]
- in class, work out d/dx (1/s) [see p. 60, where his
script r is my s]. [collect in class 1/2]
- note that grad (1/s) = -s/s^3
Formulate the integral for E in terms of the gradient
of a scalar function, the electric potential V. One then calculates V and
takes the negative gradient to obtain the electric field.
Revisit the axis of a cylinder calculation. Calculate
V then take gradient to obtain E.
Vcalc.mws is a calc for the axis of a cylinder.
Surface charge distribution. Revisit E off the axis of
a disc. Calculate V then take gradient to find E.
Tuesday Sep 5
Faraday's rules for electric field. Faraday calculations
- constant number of lines of force leave each coulomb
of charge. 4 pi k per coulomb
- E = lines per unit area passing through the surface.
- lines sliding along the surface don't count
- method is simpler than Gauss's law, but very same underlying
basis where symmetry exists
- calculate the approximate electric field at 2.3 m from
the axis of a uniformly-charged right circular cylinder (at equal distances
from either end of the cylinder) of radius 1.0 m and length 380 m. The
charge density in the cylinder is 4.7 x 10-9 C/m^3. [collect in class]
Thursday Sep 7
Homework due today
- prob 1.13, p. 15 gradient of r^n
- E on axis of a charged disc of radius R
- show all steps in integration, with a good skecth
- show what happens as z->0. Identify the answer with
a familiar result.
- show what happens as z-> infinity. E->0 is unsatisfactory.
Show how a familiar result is obtained
- E on axis of a cylinder of uniform charge density rho,
length L, radius R.
- Let z->0 and show that a proper result is obtained
- Let z-> infinity and show that the proper result is
obtained.
- The following two problems are postponed until a later
assignment
- prob 1.20 p. 22 product rules for grad
- probs 1.26a and 1.27 p. 27
Flux of a vector G: dot product of vector and
surface area: d flux = G dot da
calculate the flux of gravitational field g over
the surface of the Earth [collect in class]
Definition of divergence of a vector: divergence of G=
div G = limit volume->0 of (flux of G)/volume
example: divergence in
rectangular coordinates
to do the rectangular coordinate expansion, we will need
a taylor series expansion
Gauss's theorem - flux of vector G over a surface
enclosing a volume =volume integral of divergence of G
Gauss's law: div D = rho, D=epsilon E
Friday September 8 and Monday September 11
Laplace's equation: laplacian of V = - rho/epsilon
Electric conductors
- net charge all at the surface
- E inside a static solid conductor is zero
- charges free to move in a conductor
- charges are not moving, and they would move if E<>0
- E must be perpendicular to surface
- charges are free to move along the surface
- charges are at rest
- charges would move along the surface if E(tangent to
surface)<>0
- relation between sigma and E at the surface
- E inside =0, so E exists only outside the surface
- Children's Faraday view: E = lines/area = (4 pi k sigma
da)/da = 4 pi sigma
- Adult view: use gaussian surface to show 4 pi sigma =Esurface
- E due to an infinite sheet of charge, chg/area = sigma
- there is electric flux above and below the sheet
- Faraday: E = lines/area = 1/2 (4 pi k sigma da)/da =
2 pi sigma
- Gauss: calculate flux out both top and bottom
- force on a charge at the surface depends on Esurface/2
- remove a tiny area A
- tiny area A acts like an infinite sheet when one is super-close
to it
- with tiny area in place, E inside =0, just beneath center
of tiny area
- E(tiny area) = 2 pi k sigma
- therefore E due to the rest of the conductor surface
must also equal 2 pi k sigma
- and so, the force on the tiny area is its charge times
E from the rest of the conductor
Homework Due (date not yet set)
- Calculate E on the axis of a cylinder of length L and
radius R, uniform charge density rho, at a distance z>L/2 from the center
of the cylinder. This must be set up as an integral in two variables and
the result presented in terms of rho, k, L, R, and z.
- There is a spherical surface of radius R and polar angle
alpha, having a uniform charge density sigma. Set up an integral in theta
(the angle from the polar axis) for the electric field on the axis of this
spherical 'cap', at a distance h>R from the center of the cap.
The first homework problem above has you calculate the
electric potential on the axis of a cylindrical shell of charge. This is
the basis a primitive model of a charged wire, based on 6 cylindrical elements,
only 3 of which are independent. The six sections all have the same potential,
so you can write down 3 equations in 3 unknowns to determine charge density
on each element. Get Maple or something to solve this. You should definitely
find that the charge density is higher at the ends than in the middle.
At some point in the quarter we will go into the lab and
check on the charge distribution on a long charged conducting rod.
Laplace's equation
- derive it
- taylor series leads to iterative solution
- simple, simple spreadsheet of a thin sheet of conductor
lets us look at charge near the edge and in the middle
The line of 1000 v values is supposed to represent a line
(or more properly a sheet coming out of the page) of conductor. The iterative
solution to laplace's equation is shown surrounding this sheet (in the
middle of a grid which runs about 50 cells horizontally and about 100 cells
vertically.
Estimate the ratio of the surface electric field perpendicular
to the sheet at the end to the surface electric field perpendicular to
the sheet in the middle. Take the length and width of each cell to be 0.05
m.
Estimate the ratio of the charge density in the middle
of the sheet to the charge density at the end of the sheet.
Separating the variables in Laplace's equation. In 2-d,
one gets periodic and exponential solutions. A series solution is often
called for, with coefficients required.
Homework for week of September
25
- You were to work out with laptops in class example 3.3
starting on p. 127. This amounted to using the coeffficients, and obtaining
a graph like Fig 3.19 and one like 3.18
- You were also to work out the coefficients for a problem
where the potential V in the y-direction went from 0 to 1 and back down
to zero while y was going from 0 to pi.
- These were due by the end of the week (or maybe the middle
of the week)
- I'll still take these for a while longer.
Image charges
- Image of a charge above a grounded conducting plane
is as far below the plane as the charge is above it, in a mirror image
position. The image is of opposite sign to the charge above the plane.
- this satisfies the condition that E at the plane is perpendicular
to the surface
- this satisfies the condition that V=0 everywhere on the
surface of the plane
- the potential and field on the 'real' side of the plane
can be calculated using both the real charge and the image
- the surface charge distribution on the plane may be calculated
from E due to both charges
- Image of a charge near a grounded conducting sphere
- the image location is such that R^2 = ab, where a is
the distance of the charge and b is the distance of the image from the
center of the sphere. R is the sphere radius
- the image is of opposite sign and smaller in magnitude
than the original charge, in the ratio of two distances
- for a charge near a conducting sphere, one additional
image charge is needed, at the center of the sphere
Electric dipoles and the multipole expansion
- an electric dipole has +q and -q separated by a distance
d. d points from - to + charge.
- electric dipole moment = p = qd.
- V at a displacement r from the dipole is k (p
dot r)/r^3, as shown on p. 146 (and in class)
- This makes sense, since only two vectors are around,
p and r, and V is a scalar.
- We worked out in class that E = -kp/r^3
-k(p dot r)r/r^5 [this is problem 3.33, p. 155]
- The multipole expansion is done in section 3.4 starting
on p. 146.
- It could be written as V0+V1+V2, where
- V0 is the total charge,
- V1 is the potential due to the electric dipole moment
of the charge distribution
- V2 is the potential due to the electric quadrupole moment
of the charge distribution
- etc.
- The expansion rests on 1/sqrt(1+x^2-2x cos(theta)) =
sum on nof x^n P_n(theta), where P_n is the legendre polynomial of order
n.
Homework problems due Tuesday October
3, 2000
- (Very easy) use Maple to show that 1/sqrt(1+x^2-2x cos(theta))
= sum on nof x^n P_n(theta), by simply asking for an expansion in x. You
must compare the coefficients with those in the book and demonstrate they
are the same as the P_n.
- Problem 4.8 p. 165 (not very hard either)
- Quadrupole moment problem (looks messy but is not messy
or horrible)
- a) Show that the quadrupole moment can be written as
the integral of (2z^2 -x^2 -y^2)/2 over the charge distribution. [see P_2(theta)
and note z=r cos theta]
- for an ellipsoidal distribution of charge, rho is constant
over a bounding surface of (x/a)^2+(y/b)^2+(z/c)^2 = 1. Let a=b for the
case we wish to consider
- b) show that the total charge is rho times the volume
of the ellipsoid, which is 4/3 pi a^2b
- change variables to x' = x/a, y' = y/b, z'=z/c. This
changes the bounding surface to x'^2+y'^2+z'^2 = 1, a sphere of unit radius.
the volume element changes too, such that dx=a dx', etc. Then one only
integrates over the volume of the unit sphere
- c) Show that the quadrupole moment is given by QM = rho
4 pi a^2 b (c^2-a^2)/15.
- again change variable as done above. You will be left
with things like the integral of x^2 over the unit sphere. But for the
unit sphere the integral of x^2 is 1/3 of the integral for r^2 because
the integrals of x^2 and y^2 and z^2 over the unit sphere are all the same,
and r^2 = x^2+y^2+z^2
Homework due on Monday October
9, 2000
- Problem 3.8 (to do with image charges and a sphere) p.
126.
- A 1.5 microcoulomb charge is 0.085 m from a grounded,
conducting infinite plane. Directly below the charge is a hemispherical
conducting bulge, part of the grounded conducting plane. Determine the
force exerted on the 1.5 microcoulomb plane if the radius of the bulge
is 0.050 m. [This requires placing the correct number of image charges,
then figuring out the force.]
- Problem 4.7 in Griffiths, p. 165. [Try bringing the charges
in from infinity one at a time. The work to bring in either with a uniform
field present is infinite, but the net amount of work is finite.]
Homework due on Thursday October
19, 2000
- Problem 4.18 p. 184
- Problem 5.11 p. 220
- Problem 5.46 p. 249
Homework due on Monday October
23, 2000
Homework due on Tuesday November
7, 2000
- problem 9.11, p. 382
- maple solution to non-reflective coating
Homework due Friday November
10, 2000 Due by end of class Friday, no later.
- Plot like Fig 9.17, one of these for each polarization
direction, (each counts as one problem)
- Work out the condition for odd TE modes in a slab waveguide
of thickness 2a.
- Determine the lowest two TE modes for a slab waveguide
10 microns thick at a vacuum wavelength of 0.5 microns . The indices are
1.55 inside and 1.3 outside