Determining if a field is electrostatic or not

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To determine if the vector field F = constant / (x^2 + y^2 + z^2) is electrostatic, it must be established whether it is conservative and curl-free. The field described lacks directional components, making it challenging to compute the curl directly. If interpreted as the modulus of a gravitational or electrical field, the vector can be expressed in terms of direction cosines, leading to a conservative field upon taking the curl. A time-independent vector field that is curl-free can be classified as electrostatic, and since the given expression has no time variable, it suggests a static nature. Ultimately, the field can be considered electrostatic if it meets these criteria.
mitch_1211
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If i have an arbitrary vector field, say F = constant / (x^2 + y^2 +z^2)
I want to determine if it is electrostatic or not. For this I am thinking I should first determine if it is a conservative field, but not 100% sure, any guidance would be appreciated

:)

mitch
 
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An electrostatic field has curl F=0, but the F you right is not a vector, unless "constant" is a vector.
 
clem said:
but the F you right is not a vector, unless "constant" is a vector.
Yea i think its a trick question, the F is bold in the example I'm looking at, but then there are no vector directions on the right side of the = so in that case, you can't take the curl can you?
 
I think the OP refers to the modulus of a vector.Notice x^2+y^2+z^2 equals r^2.
My guess is that F is the modulus of a gravitational or electrical field. In such a case we can write the vector field using the direction cosines and, upon taking the curl of that vector, we find it's conservative.
 
If you have only the modulus of a field, you cannot determine whether it's electrostatic or not.

Of course, any time-independent vector field, which is curl free, can be an electrostatic field. The source (charge distribution) is given by

\rho=\vec{\nabla} \cdot \vec{E},

where I'm using Heaviside-Lorentz (rationalized Gauß) units.
 
Unless there's more hidden in the problem than stated, F = constant / (x2 + y2 +z2) is just F = constant / r2. You have not stated the direction of this vector, but I assume it is radial:
F = Fr = constant / r2
This is just the static field produced by a point source if the field is central and inverse-square-law in nature. For instance this would be the electrostatic field due to a point charge, or the gravitational field due to a point mass.
 
The radius vector, \vec{e}_r=\vec{r}/r (with r=|\vec{r}|) is not a constant. Of course, the Coulomb field is potential field,

\vec{E}=\frac{q}{4 \pi r^2} \vec{e}_r=-\vec{\nabla} \frac{q}{4 \pi r},

and thus an electrostatic field. The charge distribution is

\vec{\nabla} \cdot \vec{E}=-\Delta \frac{q}{4 \pi r}=q \delta^{(3)}(\vec{r}).
 
Actually, I think the question is a bit more simple. It is asked whether or not a field is electrostatic. In other terms, if it is time-independent. By looking at the expression, there is no time variable in there. So there we have the "static" part. Now is it electrostatic? Well, from Faraday:
\vec{\nabla}\times\vec{E}=-\frac{\partial\vec{B}}{\partial t}

Where the right side becomes zero (time-independent). Thus, in electrostatic, we would need the electric field E to be conservative also.
 
Sure, any conservative time-independent field can be an electrostatic field. I've only shown this for the Coulomb field.
 

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