Electric field in cylinder with missing section

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Homework Help Overview

The problem involves calculating the electric field generated by a uniformly charged, non-conducting, infinitely long cylinder with a cylindrical void removed from it. The cylinder is oriented parallel to the z-axis, and the void is off-center, which complicates the analysis of the electric field at specific points along the x-axis.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Assumption checking, Conceptual clarification

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the application of Gauss's Law, particularly in relation to the missing section of the cylinder. There is an exploration of how to model the charge distribution effectively, including the suggestion of using a negative charge to account for the void.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active, with participants exploring different conceptual approaches to the problem. Some guidance has been offered regarding modeling the charge distribution, and there is an indication that understanding is developing among participants.

Contextual Notes

Participants are considering the implications of the off-center void on the electric field calculations and how to maintain the overall charge density in the presence of the missing material.

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Homework Statement


A uniformly charged, non-conducting, infinitely long cylinder of radius A is parallel to the z-axis, and its central axis intersects the x-y plane at the origin. It has a charge density p (C/m^3). Material is removed from the cylinder leaving a cylindrical void of radius A/2 running parallel to the z-axis, but its central axis intersects the x-y plane at the point x = A/2, y =0. Calculate the electric field at the points x = 0, x = A/4, x = A/2, and x = A.


Homework Equations


flux = E A cos(theta)
total charge = (p)(volume)
flux = total charge/e0
area of cylinder cross section before removal: piA^2
area of void cross section: (piA^2)/4
area of cylinder cross section after removal: (3piA^2)/4


The Attempt at a Solution


We're working on Gauss's Law in class so I'm guessing I'm supposed to use that, and I think I understand how to do this if a section wasn't missing, but I have no idea how to take into account the off-center missing section.

Thanks!
 
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Hint: You can cancel a positive charge by adding a negative charge.

What kind of negative charge would you need to add to produce the given charge distribution with its missing section?
 
I'm not sure I understand...
You mean, in order to keep p of the area as a whole constant before and after material is removed?
 
Here's what I'm getting at. Finding the field from a solid cylinder (or two solid cylinders) is easy. But having a missing piece makes it hard. So see if you can model the charge distribution with the missing piece as being composed of two solid cylinders, one of which happens to be negatively charged.
 
I think I got it now. thanks a lot!
 

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