Find the flux through the equilateral triangle with corners at

AI Thread Summary
To find the electric flux through the equilateral triangle, the equation Flux = EA is applicable only when the electric field is perpendicular to the surface area. The area vector of the triangle must be determined, which is normal to the triangle's surface and has a magnitude equal to the triangle's area. For the case where the electric field is directed in the z direction, the orientation of the triangle affects the calculated flux. The discussion emphasizes the importance of understanding how the orientation of a surface relative to the electric field impacts the flux calculation. Properly accounting for these factors will lead to the correct answer for both scenarios presented.
apebeast
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Homework Statement


Find the flux through the equilateral triangle with corners at the points (1m,0,0), (0,1m,0), and (0,0,1m) in x,y,z space (measured in meters) for an electric field with magnitude E=6N/C pointing
  • (a) in the z direction,
  • (b) parallel to the line y = x.


Homework Equations


Flux = EA;
Surface area of an equilateral triangle = (sqrt(3)/4)(a^2), where a = side of the triangle
Distance formula = sqrt(((x2-x1)^2) + (y2-y1)^2)


The Attempt at a Solution



I approached this using the equation:

Flux = EA, where "E" is 6 N/C.

I tried solving for A by using the formula for the equilateral triangle area: ((sqrt(3)*s^2)/4), where s
is the side of the triangle. I solved for the side using the distance formula.

Now, with all things in consideration, I plugged everything in:

E=6
A=((sqrt(3)*(sqrt(2))^2)/4); s=sqrt(2);

E=6
A=(sqrt(3)/2) or .867

Flux = 3sqrt(3) or 5.1962

Now, I put this answer for question (a), and still got the wrong answer. What am I doing incorrectly?

Thank you kindly for the help.


Nicu
 
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Hello, and welcome to PF!

apebeast said:

Homework Equations


Flux = EA;

This equation is valid only if the electric field is oriented perpendicular to the area surface. You should have covered how this equation is modified to handle other cases.
 
Find the area vector of the triangle. Remember that it should be normal to the triangle's surface and have magnitude equal to the triangle's area.
 
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