Does a constant electric flux produce a current?

AI Thread Summary
A constant electric flux does not produce a current in a wire with a constant electric field, as demonstrated by the application of Gauss' Law, which indicates zero net flux through a closed surface. The discussion highlights that while the electric field is constant, the current can still flow due to other factors, such as the Lorentz force and the properties of the material. The integration surface used in the analysis is crucial, as it must be closed to apply Gauss' Law correctly. In practical scenarios, like in MOSFETs, a constant electric field can lead to current flow, but this is constrained by the physical properties of the device. Thus, while a constant electric field does not inherently produce current, other conditions can allow for current to exist.
eoghan
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Hi! Suppose I have a wire with a potential difference V=bx where b is a constant. Then there is an electric field which is constant: E=b through out the wire. Well, now consider this relation:
I=\frac{dq}{dt}=\frac{d}{dt}\epsilon_0\int{\vec{E}\cdot\hat{n}dS}=\epsilon_0 S \frac{dE}{dt}=0
where I used the Gauss' theorem and the fact that E is constant.
From this relation then follows that the electric current is 0! But I do have an electric current in the wire! Where am I wrong?
 
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What surface are you integrating over, what does "x" stand for? Could you explain the problem a little more so that I can help you, personally I can't see it. Thanks
 
Your Gaussian surface must be closed. The current flows in one side and out the other, which is why the integral is zero.
 
Zaphys said:
What surface are you integrating over, what does "x" stand for? Could you explain the problem a little more so that I can help you, personally I can't see it. Thanks

Let's say that the wire lies along the x axis.. then x represents a point of the wire. I integrate over a surface perpendicular to the wire in a point x with the center on the wire. But the surface is meaningless, what matters is that if E is constant in time, then its flux will be constant in time (if the surface is constant in time).

clem said:
The current flows in one side and out the other, which is why the integral is zero.
Yes, but if you define I=dq/dt then you have I=d/dt (flux(E)) which is zero. With the Gauss' theorem I don't get the net current in the surface (which is zero), but the charge.
 
Have it your way, but I thought you said "I used the Gauss' theorem".
 
eoghan said:
Let's say that the wire lies along the x axis.. then x represents a point of the wire. I integrate over a surface perpendicular to the wire in a point x with the center on the wire. But the surface is meaningless, what matters is that if E is constant in time, then its flux will be constant in time (if the surface is constant in time).


Yes, but if you define I=dq/dt then you have I=d/dt (flux(E)) which is zero. With the Gauss' theorem I don't get the net current in the surface (which is zero), but the charge.

clem is correct here, you used Gauss' Law to relate the charge to the electric field, but Gauss' law requires a closed surface and since you have a spacially constant electric field you will always have zero flux. You should instead try the Lorentz force, however, you would need knowledge of the saturation velocity of charges, otherwise the constant force over an infinite wire will create infinite current.

Still, in respect to your original question, yes, a constant flux can create current. I know that in a simple MOSFET model, we assume that there is a constant electric field between the source and drain which results in a current. The amount of current is limited by the finite cross-sectional area of the transistor, the finite length of the transistor, and the finite saturation velocity of the mobile carriers.
 
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