Proof that disk of charge = point charge when very far?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on demonstrating that the electric field above a uniformly charged disk behaves like that of a point charge when observed from a significant distance. The key challenge is to manipulate the electric field equation to show that it decreases with the square of the distance, similar to the point charge formula E ~ q/4πεx². Participants suggest using the binomial expansion to simplify the expression, particularly when the distance x is much larger than the disk radius R. The conversation highlights the importance of approximations in deriving the desired relationship. Ultimately, the solution involves recognizing the correct limits and applying the binomial expansion effectively.
Brennen berkley
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Homework Statement


Take the expression 21.11 (pictured below, specifically the bottom one) for the electric field above the center of a uniformly charged disk with radius R and surface charge density σ, and show that when one is very far from the disk, the field decreases with the same square of the distance as it would for a point charge, E ~ q/4πεx2, where q is the total charge on the disk.

Screen_Shot_2016_02_25_at_9_04_14_PM.png


Homework Equations

The Attempt at a Solution


I solved one like this pretty easily where you prove that a long wire acts as an infinite wire, but I've been looking at this one for about an hour and I'm stumped. I know I need to get x2 on the bottom of the equation without being inside a square root, but I don't know how. The only approximation I can think of is that when R is much bigger than x, √(x2 + R2 + 1) goes to 1, but then I don't have an x anymore.
 
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I think you mean x much larger than R.
Do you know the binomial expansion of (1+t)a for small t?

Edit: must learn to post more quickly.
 
Yes, I meant if x is much larger than R then √(R2/x2 + 1) goes to 0 (hopefully I said it right that time). I haven't done binomial expansions, for a while so I'll review those, thanks.
 
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Ok I'm still stuck. I used σ = q/πR2 and did the binomial expansion and got this:
Screen_Shot_2016_02_25_at_10_19_00_PM.png


EDIT: that should be R2/2x2
 
Note that ##\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+t^2}} = (1+t^2)^{-1/2}##
 
I see how to do it know, it's pretty simple, thanks.
 
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