Computing for Electric Field given cylindrical coordinates of v.

jhosamelly
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Homework Statement



If the scalar electric potential v in some region is given in cylindrical coordinates by
v (r, \phi, z) = r^2 sin \phi e^{\frac{-3}{z}}, what is the electric field \vec{E} in that region?

Homework Equations



E = -\nabla v

The Attempt at a Solution



So, first I need to change the cylindrical coordinates to cartesian coordinates.

v (r, \phi, z) = r^2 sin \phi e^{\frac{-3}{z}}

v (r, \phi, z) = (x^2 + y^2) \frac{y}{r} e^{\frac{-3}{z}}

v (r, \phi, z) = (x^2 + y^2) \frac{y}{\sqrt{x^2 + y^2}} e^{\frac{-3}{z}}

v (r, \phi, z) = y e^{\frac{-3}{z}} \sqrt{x^2 + y^2}

** so is this already the cartesian coordinates? can I perform the gradient now?
 
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vela said:
That's one way to do it. It would probably be simpler to use the gradient in cylindrical coordinates. See, for example, equation (32) on http://mathworld.wolfram.com/CylindricalCoordinates.html.

ow, I see. We were not given that formula though. So I think I need to do it in cartesian coordinates. Thanks.
 
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