
By the end of this lesson, students should be able to:
Define electric flux.
State and apply Gauss’s Law.
Identify appropriate Gaussian surfaces.
Calculate electric fields using symmetry arguments.
Apply Gauss’s Law to spherical, cylindrical, and planar charge distributions.
Solve AP Physics C problems involving electric flux and Gauss’s Law.
For a single point charge, the electric field can be found using Coulomb’s Law.
\(E = k\frac{|Q|}{r^2}\)
However, for complicated charge distributions involving many charges, Coulomb’s Law often becomes difficult to apply directly.
Gauss’s Law provides a more powerful method for calculating electric fields when sufficient symmetry exists.
Gauss’s Law is one of Maxwell’s fundamental equations of electromagnetism.
It relates electric fields to the charge enclosed within a closed surface.
The law reveals a deep connection between electric charge and electric field.
Electric flux measures the amount of electric field passing through a surface.
Mathematically:
\(\Phi_E = \vec{E}\cdot\vec{A}\)
where:
\(\Phi_E\) = electric flux
\(\vec{E}\) = electric field
\(\vec{A}\) = area vector
The area vector is defined as:
Perpendicular to the surface
Magnitude equal to the area
The direction is usually chosen outward from a closed surface.
For a uniform electric field:
\(\Phi_E = EA\cos\theta\)
where:
\(E\) = electric field magnitude
\(A\) = surface area
\(\theta\) = angle between \(\vec{E}\) and \(\vec{A}\)
When \(\theta = 0^\circ\):
\(\Phi_E = EA\)
Maximum flux occurs.
When \(\theta = 90^\circ\):
\(\Phi_E = 0\)
No electric field passes through the surface.
A closed surface completely encloses a volume.
Examples:
Sphere
Cube
Cylinder
Gaussian surface
A flat sheet is not a closed surface.
For a closed surface, electric flux is calculated over the entire surface.
The notation
\(\oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}\)
indicates a surface integral over a closed surface.
Gauss’s Law states:
The net electric flux through any closed surface equals the enclosed charge divided by the permittivity of free space.
Mathematically:
\(\oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}=\frac{Q_{enc}}{\varepsilon_0}\)
where:
\(Q_{enc}\) = enclosed charge
\(\varepsilon_0\) = permittivity of free space
The constant is:
\(\varepsilon_0 = 8.85\times10^{-12};C^2/(N\cdot m^2)\)
This constant appears throughout electromagnetism.
Gauss’s Law says:
Positive enclosed charge produces positive flux.
Negative enclosed charge produces negative flux.
No enclosed charge means zero net flux.
Only enclosed charge matters.
Charges outside the surface do not affect the net flux.
Gauss’s Law is always true.
However, it becomes useful only when symmetry allows the electric field to be factored out of the integral.
Common symmetries:
Spherical symmetry
Cylindrical symmetry
Planar symmetry
Identify the symmetry.
Choose an appropriate Gaussian surface.
Calculate enclosed charge.
Evaluate electric flux.
Solve for the electric field.
Consider a point charge (Q).
Choose a spherical Gaussian surface of radius (r).
Since the electric field is constant everywhere on the sphere:
\(\oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}=E\oint dA\)
The surface area of a sphere is:
\(A=4\pi r^2\)
Therefore:
\(E(4\pi r^2)=\frac{Q}{\varepsilon_0}\)
Solving for (E):
\(E=\frac{Q}{4\pi\varepsilon_0r^2}\)
This is exactly Coulomb’s Law.
Outside a conducting sphere:
\(E=\frac{Q}{4\pi\varepsilon_0r^2}\)
The sphere behaves as if all charge were concentrated at its center.
Inside a conductor at electrostatic equilibrium:
\(E=0\)
This follows directly from Gauss’s Law and electrostatic equilibrium.
Suppose a line of charge has linear charge density:
\(\lambda=\frac{Q}{L}\)
Choose a cylindrical Gaussian surface.
The enclosed charge is:
\(Q_{enc}=\lambda L\)
Applying Gauss’s Law:
\(E(2\pi rL)=\frac{\lambda L}{\varepsilon_0}\)
Solving:
\(E=\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0r}\)
Notice that the field decreases as:
\(E\propto\frac{1}{r})\
rather than \(1/r^2\).
Suppose an infinite sheet has surface charge density:
\(\sigma=\frac{Q}{A}\)
Choose a cylindrical “pillbox” Gaussian surface.
Applying Gauss’s Law:
\(2EA=\frac{\sigma A}{\varepsilon_0}\)
Solving:
\(E=\frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0}\)
The electric field produced by an infinite sheet is constant.
It does not depend on distance from the sheet.
This result is frequently tested on AP exams.
A uniform electric field of magnitude
\(E=200;N/C\)
passes perpendicularly through a surface of area
\(A=3.0;m^2\)
Find the electric flux.
Solution:
\(\Phi_E=EA\)
\(\Phi_E=(200)(3.0)\)
\(\Phi_E=600;N\cdot m^2/C\)
Answer:
\(\Phi_E=600;N\cdot m^2/C\)
A charge
\(Q=2.0\times10^{-6}C\)
is enclosed by a spherical Gaussian surface of radius
\(r=0.50m\)
Find the electric field.
Solution:
\(E=\frac{Q}{4\pi\varepsilon_0r^2}\)
Substituting values:
\(E=7.19\times10^4N/C\)
Answer:
\(E=7.19\times10^4N/C\)
Including charges outside the Gaussian surface.
Only enclosed charge contributes to:
\(\oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}\)
Choosing a Gaussian surface without symmetry.
Gauss’s Law becomes useful only when symmetry simplifies the electric field.
Confusing electric field and electric flux.
Electric field:
\(E\)
Electric flux:
\(\Phi_E\)
They are different physical quantities with different units.
Ask:
Is the charge distribution spherical?
Is it cylindrical?
Is it planar?
If yes, Gauss’s Law is often the best approach.
Begin with:
\(\oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}=\frac{Q_{enc}}{\varepsilon_0}\)
Then simplify based on symmetry.
This earns significant partial credit on AP free-response questions.
Electric flux measures electric field passing through a surface.
\(\Phi_E=\vec{E}\cdot\vec{A}\)
Gauss’s Law relates electric flux to enclosed charge.
\(\oint \vec{E}\cdot d\vec{A}=\frac{Q_{enc}}{\varepsilon_0}\)
Only enclosed charge affects net flux.
Symmetry is essential when applying Gauss’s Law.
Spherical symmetry leads to Coulomb’s Law.
Cylindrical symmetry produces:
\(E=\frac{\lambda}{2\pi\varepsilon_0r}\)
Infinite sheets produce:
\(E=\frac{\sigma}{2\varepsilon_0}\)
Gauss’s Law is one of the most powerful tools in AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism.
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