gnegnegne
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Hi everyone!
I have to solve a problem using Poisson's equation.
There are two parallel infinite conductor planes in vacuum. The distance between them is d and they are both kept at a potential V=0. Between them there is a uniform volume density charge \rho_0>0 infinite along the directions parallel to the planes and its width is d/2 (it's a parallelepiped that starts at x=0 and ends at d/2). I have to find the the potential and the electric field in the region between the planes.
For 0<x<d/2, solving the Poisson's equation (I integrated \frac{\partial^2 V}{\partial x^2}=-\frac{\rho_0}{\epsilon_0}):
V_1(x)=-\frac{\rho_0 x^2}{2 \epsilon_0}+Ax+B
For d/2<x<d, integrating \frac{\partial^2 V}{\partial x^2}=0:
V_2(x)=Cx+D
Setting the two boundary conditions at x=0 and at x=d I obtain D=-Cd and B=0, therefore:
V_1(x)=-\frac{\rho_0 x^2}{2 \epsilon_0}+Ax
V_2(x)=C(x-d)
I can get ride of one of the two unknowns using the condition that V(x) has to be continuous at x=d/2, however I'm missing another condition. What other condition should be considered? Intuitively I would impose the condition that the electric field has to be continuous too, but I'm not 100% sure.
I have to solve a problem using Poisson's equation.
There are two parallel infinite conductor planes in vacuum. The distance between them is d and they are both kept at a potential V=0. Between them there is a uniform volume density charge \rho_0>0 infinite along the directions parallel to the planes and its width is d/2 (it's a parallelepiped that starts at x=0 and ends at d/2). I have to find the the potential and the electric field in the region between the planes.
For 0<x<d/2, solving the Poisson's equation (I integrated \frac{\partial^2 V}{\partial x^2}=-\frac{\rho_0}{\epsilon_0}):
V_1(x)=-\frac{\rho_0 x^2}{2 \epsilon_0}+Ax+B
For d/2<x<d, integrating \frac{\partial^2 V}{\partial x^2}=0:
V_2(x)=Cx+D
Setting the two boundary conditions at x=0 and at x=d I obtain D=-Cd and B=0, therefore:
V_1(x)=-\frac{\rho_0 x^2}{2 \epsilon_0}+Ax
V_2(x)=C(x-d)
I can get ride of one of the two unknowns using the condition that V(x) has to be continuous at x=d/2, however I'm missing another condition. What other condition should be considered? Intuitively I would impose the condition that the electric field has to be continuous too, but I'm not 100% sure.
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