thatguy14
- 45
- 0
Homework Statement
There are 2 long coaxial insulating cylinder. The inner and outer cylinders have radii of a and b and charge densities λ and -λ uniformly distributed on the surface. Calulcate energy per unit length 2 ways (equations below)
Homework Equations
W = \frac{1}{2}\int σ V da
W = \frac{ε0}{2}\int E^2 dτ
The Attempt at a Solution
So using gausses law, with s (radius of cyliunder) < a there is no electric field as there is no enclosed charge. Outside both cylinders there is no E because there is no net charge. SO the only E and energy is between the 2 cylinders.
So I have to do it 2 ways, one with the first and one with the second. I am unsure though how to set up gauss's law to find the E field. Also since we are using line charge how does that change things?
So i wrote |E|* 2*pi*l*s =1/ε0\int λ*2*pi*s*dl
but this doesn't seem right. I am unsure how to deal with the line charge. Do i use like surface charge still but write it as σ = 2*pi*r*dl but what are the limits of integration? I am just a little confused at this part. Help would be nice! Thanks