Gauss' Law Universally True?

In summary: Maxwell's equations. This is true, but it is not always necessary. For example, in electrodynamics, Gauss' law and Coulomb's law are both valid equations. Sometimes it's easier to work with one of them, but in some cases it's necessary to use both.This is true, but it is not always necessary. For example, in electrodynamics, Gauss' law and Coulomb's law are both valid equations. Sometimes it's easier to work with one of them, but in some cases it's necessary to use both.
  • #1
GRDixon
249
0
According to various EM texts (Feynman, Griffiths, ...) Gauss’ law holds only in electrostatic situations. But using the point charge electric field solutions, I have found to date that it holds for a relativistically oscillating charge (wA = .99c) within at least 3 flux integration surfaces: (1) a sphere; (2) an ellipsoid; and (3) an egg. Is it possible that Gauss’ law is true for ALL source charge motions and ALL flux integration surfaces?
 
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  • #2
GRDixon said:
According to various EM texts (Feynman, Griffiths, ...) Gauss’ law holds only in electrostatic situations.

Where does Griffiths say this? Third edition preferably, because that's the one I have next to me right now.
 
  • #3
jtbell said:
Where does Griffiths say this? Third edition preferably, because that's the one I have next to me right now.

I have the 2nd Edition. Just following Eq. 2.10 in that edition Griffiths says, "Notice that it all hinges on the 1/r^2 character of Coulomb's law; without that the crucial cancellation in (2.9) would not take place, and the flux of E would depend on the surface chosen, not merely on the total charge enclosed."

Thus far I've found that the law works for a relativistically oscillating particle (whose E field does not depend only on 1/r^2). Feynman flat out states that Gauss' law only holds in electrostatics.
 
  • #4
GRDixon said:
I have the 2nd Edition. Just following Eq. 2.10 in that edition

OK, I found it... it's after Eq. 2.13 in the 3rd edition. You're reading more into that statement than is warranted. At that point, Griffiths is dealing only with electrostatics, in which Gauss's Law and Coulomb's Law are basically equivalent, and electrodynamics hasn't even entered into the picture yet.

Gauss's Law is one of Maxwell's Equations which (together with the Lorentz force law) define all of classical electromagnetism. Saying that Gauss's Law is not universally true is like saying that Maxwell's Equations aren't universally true (in the context of classical electrodynamics, that is).

Feynman flat out states that Gauss' law only holds in electrostatics.

Without a specific citation, I can only surmise that you're misinterpreting Feynman in a similar way.
 
  • #5
Seconded. Gauss Law always holds, but it is insufficient to determine the E-field unless you also know the curl of the field. In statics the later is always zero, so Gauss Law is all you need to solve a statics problem. That's probably what Feynman is talking about.
 
  • #6
jtbell said:
Without a specific citation, I can only surmise that you're misinterpreting Feynman in a similar way.

Perhaps I am. re a specific citation: in Sect. 4-6 of "TFLonP" V2, Feynman states "Our result is an important law of the electrostatic field, called Gauss' law."

In general, the formula for the electric field of a moving point charge does NOT vary as 1/r^2, as Griffiths points out in Eq. 9.107 of his 2nd edition (see "Electric field of point charge, arbitrary motion" in the index, for other editions).

I have found that Griffiths' general formula for E can always be COMPUTED, given a knowledge of the point charge's past motion (whatever that might be). That is how I found that the flux of a relativistically oscillating charge, through a few different shapes of enclosing surfaces, agreed with Gauss' law.
 
  • #7
In that quote Feynman points out that the result is important in statics. It's still valid in dynamics. It just isn't useful, for reasons I described above.

And yes, the field from a moving charge is not a 1/r², but that's not because Gauss' Law stopped working. It's because you broke the symmetry which you relied on to use Gauss' Law to derive the field.
 
  • #8
K^2 said:
In that quote Feynman points out that the result is important in statics. It's still valid in dynamics. It just isn't useful, for reasons I described above.

And yes, the field from a moving charge is not a 1/r², but that's not because Gauss' Law stopped working. It's because you broke the symmetry which you relied on to use Gauss' Law to derive the field.

Thanks to all. If either Feynman or Griffiths discusses the more general applicability of Gauss' law (outside of electrostatics), I haven't read about it. That's what got me to wondering in the first place. In any case, we all seem to be in agreement: Gauss' law holds for all source charge motions, and for all surfaces of flux integration. What a gem!
 
  • #9
GRDixon said:
Thanks to all. If either Feynman or Griffiths discusses the more general applicability of Gauss' law (outside of electrostatics), I haven't read about it. That's what got me to wondering in the first place. In any case, we all seem to be in agreement: Gauss' law holds for all source charge motions, and for all surfaces of flux integration. What a gem!

Often in electrostatics or magnetostatics we can derive relationships using only one of the Maxwell's equations. For example we can get Coulomb's law from Gauss' law and the magnetic field of an infinite wire from Ampere's Law. However, when we move to dynamics, the electric and magnetic fields become coupled and we generally lose symmetry. This requires us to use all of Maxwell's equations to properly define a system. So Gauss' law is still used in dynamics, however it is used in combination with the other equations.
 
  • #10
Consider a Gaussian beam of EM waves, propagating in the X direction. Consider a parallelopiped, whose edges are parallel to the X, Y and Z axes, the axis of the parallelopiped parallel to X not coincinding with X (best of all, shifted away from it by a distance comparable to the "width" of the beam, defined as so many standard deviations of the Gaussian function). Let the edges parallel to Y and Z be short compared to the "width"of the beam. Let the edge parallel to X be shrt compared to the wavelength of the EM wave considered. Is The Gauss law valid?
 
  • #11
Yes.
 
  • #12
htg said:
Consider a Gaussian beam of EM waves, propagating in the X direction. Consider a parallelopiped, whose edges are parallel to the X, Y and Z axes, the axis of the parallelopiped parallel to X not coincinding with X (best of all, shifted away from it by a distance comparable to the "width" of the beam, defined as so many standard deviations of the Gaussian function). Let the edges parallel to Y and Z be short compared to the "width"of the beam. Let the edge parallel to X be shrt compared to the wavelength of the EM wave considered. Is The Gauss law valid?

Since divE=0 at all points in the beam, I would think Gauss' law must be valid. That is, flux in through one surface of the parallelopipid must equal flux out through the opposing surface. More generally, I believe that Gauss' law is universally true. All of my own personal attempts to find a violation have been fruitless.
 
  • #13
Since the intensity of the beam falls off rapidly as we move away from its axis, I do not see how the Gauss' law may be satisfied.
 
  • #14
htg said:
Since the intensity of the beam falls off rapidly as we move away from its axis, I do not see how the Gauss' law may be satisfied.

It may be true that the intensity falls off as we move away from the x axis. But it increases perpendicular to that axis as the light energy disperses. The divergence entails derivatives in all 3 directions. Even the most collimated laser beams spread with distance. Laser beams pointed at the moon illuminate lunar surface areas much larger than the beam's cross section at its origination point. For what it's worth, I am sympathetic to your skepticism, perhaps because texts don't discuss the applicability/validity of Gauss' law in electrodynamic (especially relativistic) situations. But ultimately divE=rho/eps0 appears to apply in all cases, even though one of its ramifications (Gauss' law) is mostly invoked in electrostatics.
 
  • #15
We can consider a beam whose intensity falls off rapidly as we move away from the X axis along the Y axis, but is independent of the Z coordinate.
It seems that the Gauss' law violation is clear in this case.
 
  • #16
htg said:
We can consider a beam whose intensity falls off rapidly as we move away from the X axis along the Y axis, but is independent of the Z coordinate.
It seems that the Gauss' law violation is clear in this case.

Electromagnetic waves in an isotropic source-free region are divergence free. Intensity is not enough, the polarization of the wave matters as flux is dependent upon the dot product of the surface's normal with the vector field.
 
  • #17
Let us say that the E vector is parallel to the Y axis. I do not see why my last example does not violate the Gauss' law.
 
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  • #18
htg said:
Let us say that the E vector is parallel to the Y axis. I do not see why my last example does not violate the Gauss' law.

How could it? Since the electric field is polarized along the Y axis, then the k-vector must be in the z direction. If you were to imagine a rectangular solid as your Gaussian surface then the flux at the lower x-z side will cancel out the flux at the upper x-z side.
 
  • #19
If the intensity of the beam fades quickly as we move away from the X axis (I said the energy would propagate in the X direction), then I do not see how the fluxes through parallel surfaces of my cuboid would cancel each other.
 
  • #20
htg said:
If the intensity of the beam fades quickly as we move away from the X axis (I said the energy would propagate in the X direction), then I do not see how the fluxes through parallel surfaces of my cuboid would cancel each other.

A better question is how would you create such a field? The problem with your question is simply that it goes against the foundations of electromagnetics. Maxwell's Equations and the Lorentz Force are the five equations that govern all of classical electromagnetics. What you are attempting here is to come up with a unphysical problem. You can describe any kind of electromagnetic wave but that doesn't mean that it is physically feasible unless it satisfies Maxwell's equations.
 
  • #21
I think I would start from a wave from a waveguide and run it through a cylindrical lens.
Why is it impossible to create the wave I described?
 
  • #22
htg said:
I think I would start from a wave from a waveguide and run it through a cylindrical lens.
Why is it impossible to create the wave I described?

Simply by the fact that it violates the wave equations. I couldn't even show you how it violates it because the vector wave equation is built by using Gauss' Law. Again, Gauss' Law is one of the first principles of electromagnetics. Another note is that by running the wave through a lens or aperture you will violate your stipulations since it will have to result in a diffracted wave and you lose polarization.
 
  • #23
Yes, the Gauss' law is believable. But it seems generally accepted that divergence of magnetization at the end of a magnet is non-zero. It goes against the Gauss' law.
 
  • #24
htg said:
Yes, the Gauss' law is believable. But it seems generally accepted that divergence of magnetization at the end of a magnet is non-zero. It goes against the Gauss' law.

No, because there are two laws. One for electric field and another for magnetic field. They are not in conflict with each other.
 
  • #25
Non-zero divergence of magnetization contradicts the Gauss' law for magnetism.
 
  • #26
htg said:
Non-zero divergence of magnetization contradicts the Gauss' law for magnetism.

Magnetic monopoles have never been observed. So there hasn't been any contradiction since all magnetic fields are divergence free.
 
  • #27
You, Born2bwire, don't seem to understand what I say. I do not say that there is an actual phenomenon that contradicts the Gauss' law. I say that generally accepted idea that divergence of magnetization at the end of magnet is non-zero contradicts the Gauss' law for magnetism.
 
  • #28
So you're referring to the magnetization M? Consider

[tex]\vec H = \frac{1}{\mu_0} \vec B - \vec M[/tex]

[itex]\nabla \cdot \vec M[/itex] and [itex]\nabla \cdot \vec H[/itex] can be nonzero (e.g. at the end of a magnet), in which case they are equal in magnitude but opposite in sign, but [itex]\nabla \cdot \vec B[/itex] is always zero.
 
  • #29
When you look at microscopic mechanism of magnetization, you should realize that magnetization is a quantity like H, but due to bound currents.
Really, B = MuZero*(Hfree+Hbound), where Hfree = H = intensity of magnetic field due to free currents, Hbound = intensity of magnetic field due to bound currents. So my Hbound = M according to the standard terminology. When you consider microscopic mechanisms by which any magnetic field is created, you should realize that not only
div B = 0, also div Hfree = 0 and div Hbound = 0.
 
  • #30
htg said:
When you look at microscopic mechanism of magnetization, you should realize that magnetization is a quantity like H, but due to bound currents.
Really, B = MuZero*(Hfree+Hbound), where Hfree = H = intensity of magnetic field due to free currents, Hbound = intensity of magnetic field due to bound currents. So my Hbound = M according to the standard terminology. When you consider microscopic mechanisms by which any magnetic field is created, you should realize that not only
div B = 0, also div Hfree = 0 and div Hbound = 0.

So the field is divergence free. What's the issue?
 
  • #31
The issue is that textbooks (e.g. Griffiths: Introduction to electrodynamics) say that divergence of magnetization at the end of a magnet is infinite.
 
  • #32
htg said:
The issue is that textbooks (e.g. Griffiths: Introduction to electrodynamics) say that divergence of magnetization at the end of a magnet is infinite.

Where in Griffiths does it say this?
 
  • #33
Third edition, page 276:

Griffiths said:
since M and H are [in linear media] proportional to B, does it not follow that their divergence, like B's must always vanish? Unfortunately, it does not: at the boundary between two materials of different permeability the divergence of M can actually be infinite. For instance, at the end of a cylinder of linear paramagnetic material, M is zero on one side but not on the other.

[itex]\nabla \cdot \vec M[/itex] and [itex]\nabla \cdot \vec H[/itex] being infinite simply reflects the idealization of the boundary as being perfectly "sharp," with M and H changing "instantaneously" as you cross the boundary.
 
  • #34
jtbell said:
Third edition, page 276:



[itex]\nabla \cdot \vec M[/itex] and [itex]\nabla \cdot \vec H[/itex] being infinite simply reflects the idealization of the boundary as being perfectly "sharp," with M and H changing "instantaneously" as you cross the boundary.

Yeah, the dirac delta that results in the divergence due to an discountinuous boundary condiion. But that is still ok for the reasons that you, jtbell, specified earlier. Guass' Law makes constraints on the B field, not the H and M so the fact that these quantities are not always divergence free is not in contradiction with the law.
 
  • #35
At the end of section 6.4.1 (susceptibility and permeability) - at least in my Polish translation.
 
<h2>1. What is Gauss' Law?</h2><p>Gauss' Law is a fundamental law in electromagnetism that describes the relationship between electric charges and electric fields.</p><h2>2. Is Gauss' Law universally true?</h2><p>Yes, Gauss' Law is a universally true law in physics. It applies to all electric fields and charges, regardless of their location or properties.</p><h2>3. How is Gauss' Law applied in real-world situations?</h2><p>Gauss' Law is commonly used to calculate the electric field at a point due to a known distribution of charges. It is also used to determine the charge enclosed within a closed surface.</p><h2>4. What are the implications of Gauss' Law being universally true?</h2><p>The universality of Gauss' Law means that it is a powerful tool for understanding and predicting the behavior of electric fields and charges. It also allows for the development of more complex theories and laws in electromagnetism.</p><h2>5. Are there any exceptions to Gauss' Law?</h2><p>There are no known exceptions to Gauss' Law. However, in certain situations, it may be more practical to use other laws or principles to analyze electric fields and charges.</p>

1. What is Gauss' Law?

Gauss' Law is a fundamental law in electromagnetism that describes the relationship between electric charges and electric fields.

2. Is Gauss' Law universally true?

Yes, Gauss' Law is a universally true law in physics. It applies to all electric fields and charges, regardless of their location or properties.

3. How is Gauss' Law applied in real-world situations?

Gauss' Law is commonly used to calculate the electric field at a point due to a known distribution of charges. It is also used to determine the charge enclosed within a closed surface.

4. What are the implications of Gauss' Law being universally true?

The universality of Gauss' Law means that it is a powerful tool for understanding and predicting the behavior of electric fields and charges. It also allows for the development of more complex theories and laws in electromagnetism.

5. Are there any exceptions to Gauss' Law?

There are no known exceptions to Gauss' Law. However, in certain situations, it may be more practical to use other laws or principles to analyze electric fields and charges.

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