| Thread Closed |
dI/dt depends on v? |
Share Thread |
| Feb15-07, 08:21 AM | #1 |
|
|
dI/dt depends on v?
As we know,a single moving charge creats a current J=rho*v=qv^2*delta(r-vt) supposing that the charge moves along x axis.However,it is not a steady current.Making I=J.dS,how can we calculate the dI/dt?I suppose,it will depend on v in such a manner that if v increases,dI/dt will increase...Any help?(Note it's not a homework question)
|
| Thread Closed |
Similar discussions for: dI/dt depends on v?
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| a functional that depends on an integral? | Calculus | 3 | ||
| How relative density depends on R in a Centrifuge | Advanced Physics Homework | 0 | ||
| Current depends on what ? | Introductory Physics Homework | 10 | ||
| Please read, my grade depends on it | Nuclear Engineering | 5 | ||
| redshift depends on dark energy | General Physics | 0 | ||