How Cooulomb's law follows from Gauss' law?

In summary, Gauss's law is a mathematical equation that states that the magnitude of the electric field vector is inversly proportional to the square of the distance between two points. If the points are located on a sphere, then the electric field is also inversly proportional to the flux density at that point.
  • #1
skyliner34
9
0
Can anyone explain this to me?
 
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  • #2
take a look at the Wikipedia articles on inverse-square law, flux (the physical quantity you're interested in is really "flux density"), and then Gauss's law.

if the enclosing surface is a sphere surrounding the point charge, with the point at center, it's pretty easy to see how Gauss's law is directly compatible with the inverse-square relationship.
 
  • #3
First you must think what are the possible vector fields caused by a single point source (charge).
All information you have is the location of 2 points: the source and the point where you want to evaluate the vector. The problem has cylindric symmetry around the axis connecting the two points, so vector MUST be directed parallel to this axis: either straigth away or towards the source.
The magnitude of the vector must be independent of the choise of coordinate system, so it can only depend on the distance between the two points. Under this circumstances the integral of the electric field over a sphere is not difficult to evaluate.
 
  • #4
Lojzek said:
First you must think what are the possible vector fields caused by a single point source (charge).
All information you have is the location of 2 points: the source and the point where you want to evaluate the vector. The problem has cylindric symmetry around the axis connecting the two points, so vector MUST be directed parallel to this axis: either straigth away or towards the source.
The magnitude of the vector must be independent of the choise of coordinate system, so it can only depend on the distance between the two points..

there are a lot of different scaler functions of that distance.

Under this circumstances the integral of the electric field over a sphere is not difficult to evaluate.

the reason why that surface integral evaluates to a constant that is proportional to the enclosed point charge is because the magnitude of that field vector is inversly proportional to the square of the distance and proportional to the charge. why it's proportional to the amount of charge is because if you had two different charges sitting virtually next to each other, the total force you get from both should come from adding the force you get due to each charge. why it's inverse-square with distance is because of this concept of flux and flux density and where we model the field as being proportional to the flux density (or, with judicious choice of units, the same as flux density). and because the surface area of a sphere is [itex]4 \pi r^2[/itex].

think of a 100 watt light bulb surrounded by a bunch of concentric spheres all centered on the 100 watt light bulb. intensity of radiant energy is how much radiating power crosses a unit area that is held perpendicular to the flow of this radiant power. so if you were 10 meters out, that 100 watts is distributed over 4[itex]\pi[/itex]102 square meters. if you're 20 meters out, the same 100 watts is distributed over 4[itex]\pi[/itex]202 square meters. and the intensity is 100 watts divided by the area which is an inverse-square relationship.

Gauss's law does not work unless it's an inverse-square relationship with distance and proportional to the amount of "stuff" at the point source that we're measuring distance from.
 
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  • #5
Of course I meant that the dependence E(r) must be determined from Gauss law.

I only solved the first part of the problem: we are not proving Gauss law from Coulomb's. We are proving the opposite, which is more difficult. For this proof we must first use symmetry to show that the electric field vector is directed away from the source and it's magnitude depends only on the distance (when I was taught about Coulomb's law I felt cheated because this first part was omitted and the proof Coulomb->Gauss was sold as Gauss->Coulomb proof).
 
  • #6
Gauss's Law is

[tex]\nabla\cdot\vec{E} = \frac{\rho}{\epsilon_0}[/tex]

One can verify that given
[tex]\rho = q\delta^3(\vec{r})[/tex]
A solution for E is
[tex]\vec{E} = \frac{q}{4\pi\epsilon_0 r^2}[/tex]
 

1. What is Coulomb's law and Gauss' law?

Coulomb's law is a fundamental law of electrostatics that states the force between two point charges is directly proportional to the product of their charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. Gauss' law is a fundamental law of electromagnetism that relates the electric flux through a closed surface to the charge enclosed by that surface.

2. How are Coulomb's law and Gauss' law related?

Coulomb's law can be derived from Gauss' law by using the divergence theorem, which states that the flux of a vector field through a closed surface is equal to the volume integral of the divergence of that field within the enclosed volume. By applying this theorem to Gauss' law, we can obtain Coulomb's law.

3. What is the mathematical equation for Coulomb's law?

The mathematical equation for Coulomb's law is F = k(q1q2)/r^2, where F is the force between two point charges, k is the Coulomb's constant, q1 and q2 are the charges of the two point charges, and r is the distance between them.

4. How do we use Gauss' law to calculate electric fields?

Using Gauss' law, we can calculate the electric field by first choosing a closed surface that encloses the charge of interest. Then, we calculate the electric flux through that surface and equate it to the charge enclosed over the permittivity of free space. Finally, we can solve for the electric field at any point on the surface.

5. Can Coulomb's law be applied to point charges only?

No, Coulomb's law can be applied to any two charges, regardless of their size or shape. However, it is most accurate for point charges or for charges that are significantly smaller than the distance between them. For larger and more complex charges, the law can still provide an approximation of the force between them.

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