Jordanosaur
- 10
- 0
Hi all - I reposted this here, as I posted in the advanced forum on accident:
Here's the problem I am having trouble with:
A very long, solid insulating cylinder with radius "R" has a cylindrical hole with radius "a" bored along its entire length. The axis of the hole is a distance "b" from the axis of the cylinder, where a< b< R. The solid material of the cylinder has a uniform volume charge density.
Find the magnitude and direction of the electric field inside the hole using a,b(vector), \rho, \epsilon, and R.
The picture attached describes the surface. I really don't know where to start with this.
I believe that the field, "E", between the outer surface and the inner hole should = 0. Given that, we have a field inside the bored hole, and on the outer surface of the full cylinder. What I am getting hung up on is the usage of uniform charge density in the cylinder - I know that \rho= Q/V(cylinder), but because of the infinite length, I am unsure if this is a necessary step. Because of the infinite length, should I use a gaussian surface to find the field on the outside to use somehow for the inside field?
I am quite confused with this one, and I am really only looking for a place to start chipping away at it - If anyone has any suggestions as to the approach of this problem, I would highly appreciate it.
Confused,
Jordan
Here's the problem I am having trouble with:
A very long, solid insulating cylinder with radius "R" has a cylindrical hole with radius "a" bored along its entire length. The axis of the hole is a distance "b" from the axis of the cylinder, where a< b< R. The solid material of the cylinder has a uniform volume charge density.
Find the magnitude and direction of the electric field inside the hole using a,b(vector), \rho, \epsilon, and R.
The picture attached describes the surface. I really don't know where to start with this.
I believe that the field, "E", between the outer surface and the inner hole should = 0. Given that, we have a field inside the bored hole, and on the outer surface of the full cylinder. What I am getting hung up on is the usage of uniform charge density in the cylinder - I know that \rho= Q/V(cylinder), but because of the infinite length, I am unsure if this is a necessary step. Because of the infinite length, should I use a gaussian surface to find the field on the outside to use somehow for the inside field?
I am quite confused with this one, and I am really only looking for a place to start chipping away at it - If anyone has any suggestions as to the approach of this problem, I would highly appreciate it.
Confused,
Jordan