Fields at the ends of a parallel plates

AI Thread Summary
Field lines bulge outward at the ends of finite-length plates due to their tendency to align perpendicularly to the surface. This outward bulging is similar to the behavior of dipoles, where the configuration seeks to minimize total energy. If the lines curved inward, it would increase the field strength between the plates, resulting in higher stored energy. The optimal arrangement occurs when the lines spread out into space, reducing their density and minimizing energy. Understanding this behavior helps clarify the differences between finite and infinite plate configurations.
Pranav Jha
Messages
141
Reaction score
1
Why do the field lines bulge out at the ends of plates with finite lengths? I understand why the field is uniform between infinitely long plates but cannot extend the concept to plates with fixed length:(

I know they have to bulge but why not bulge inwards rather than outwards?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Hi Pranav Jha! :smile:

Basically, it's because they prefer to go perpendicular to the surface …

at the end, that's outward! :wink:
 
Another explanation comes from realizing that the configuration must have minimal total energy. Curving the lines inwards increases the field strength in between the plates, leading to higher stored energy. (Energy is proportional to the square of the density of flux lines.) Energy is minimized when the lines spread out into space with low density.
 
Thread 'Is there a white hole inside every black hole?'
This is what I am thinking. How much feasible is it? There is a white hole inside every black hole The white hole spits mass/energy out continuously The mass/energy that is spit out of a white hole drops back into it eventually. This is because of extreme space time curvature around the white hole Ironically this extreme space time curvature of the space around a white hole is caused by the huge mass/energy packed in the white hole Because of continuously spitting mass/energy which keeps...
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
Back
Top