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Homework Help
Advanced Physics Homework Help
Potential, field, Laplacian and Spherical Coordinates
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[QUOTE="AdkinsJr, post: 4541071, member: 200896"] [h2]Homework Statement [/h2] Say I am given a spherically symmetric potential function V(r), written in terms of r and a bunch of other constants, and say it is just a polynomial of some type with r as the variable, [tex]\frac{q}{4\pi\varepsilon_o}P(r)[/tex], and we are inside the sphere of radius R, so r<R… [h2]Homework Equations[/h2] [tex]\vec E =-\vec\nabla V[/tex] The operator should reduce since there is are no components for phi or theta, so in spherical [tex]\vec\nabla =\frac{\partial}{\partial r}\hat r[/tex] So is it that simple? Just compute the gradient? [/QUOTE]
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Potential, field, Laplacian and Spherical Coordinates
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