How Is Electric Flux Calculated Through a Non-Uniform Field in a Cube?

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The discussion focuses on calculating electric flux through a cube in a non-uniform electric field. For part (a), the flux through the cube with the electric field E = 3.00y is calculated as 3.993 Nm²/C. In part (b), the electric field E = -4i + (6 + 3y)j complicates the calculation due to its x and y components, requiring the use of dot products with area vectors for each face of the cube. The approach involves integrating the resulting expressions for each face to find the total flux. The method emphasizes the importance of understanding the direction of the electric field and the geometry of the cube.
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Homework Statement


A cube, placed in a region of electric field, is oriented such that one of its corners is at the origin and its edges are parallel to the x, y, and z axes as shown to the left. The length of each of its edges is 1.1 m.

(a) What is the flux through the cube if the electric field is given by E = 3.00y?
3*1.1^3 = 3.993

flux = 3.993Nm^2/C

(b) What is the flux through the cube if the electric field is given by E = -4i + (6 +3y)j
flux = ?


Homework Equations


flux = E dot A = |E||A|cos(theta)

The Attempt at a Solution



-4(1.1)^3 + (6+3*1.1)*1.1^2 = 5.929Nm^2/C

which isn't correct. I though that you have to find the flux in the x and y directions then just sum them up to get the total flux. Do I need to find the angle between the magnitude of the vectors?
 
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In (a), the electric field is strictly in the x-direction (parallel to the xy plane), although its magnitude has a y dependency. The important thing, though, is that the direction of the flux lines will be perpendicular to the front and back faces of the cube (where the front and back are assumed to be the faces parallel to the yz plane), and parallel to all other faces.

Things in (b) are a tad more complicated, with the field having distinct x and y (i and j) components. Write the outward pointing unit vectors for the dA area elements for each cube face and take the dot product with the field vector (Cartesian dot product). That will tell you what integrals you'll need to perform to sum up the flux.
 
Would the dot product be like the following:

[-4i + (6 +3y)j] dot y^2

which would just equal (6+3y)(y^2) then just integrate this from 0 to 1.1?
 
For the front face it would be [-4i + (6 + 3y)j + 0k] dot [1i + 0j +0k] = -4

For the left side face it would be [-4i + (6 + 3y)j + 0k] dot [0i -1j +0k] = -6 - 3y, where y = 0 for the left side face.

Do the rest accordingly.
 
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