- #1
wajed
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http://www.vias.org/physics/bk4_06_07.html
This is a quote from the mentioned website,
" For example, a charged metal ball will have charge spread nearly uniformly all over its surface, and in for most purposes it will make sense to ignore the fact that this uniformity is broken at the atomic level"
May I know how is that uniformity broken at the atomic level?
Also, may I know,exactly, when/how does it make sense to ignore that fact for most cases?
This is a quote from the mentioned website,
" For example, a charged metal ball will have charge spread nearly uniformly all over its surface, and in for most purposes it will make sense to ignore the fact that this uniformity is broken at the atomic level"
May I know how is that uniformity broken at the atomic level?
Also, may I know,exactly, when/how does it make sense to ignore that fact for most cases?