Reading through Jackson: Gauss Theorem

thelonious
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Homework Statement



I'm reading through Jackson and ran into the following:

An application of Gauss's theorem to

∇'^{2}G=-4πδ(x-x')

shows that

\oint(\partialG/\partialn')da'= -4∏

where G is a Green function given by 1/|x-x'| + F, and F is a function whose Laplacian is zero.

(Sec. 1.10, Formal Solution of Electrostaic Boundary Value Problem)

Homework Equations



Divergence theorem?
Gauss's theorem?

The Attempt at a Solution



I don't see how to arrive at the surface integral. This looks a bit like an application of the divergence theorem because of the surface integral term. It also looks something like Gauss's law in differential form. Is this what the author means by applying Gauss's theorem?
 
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Nothing too mysterious going on. Gauss's law tells us
$$\int_V \nabla\cdot (\nabla G)\,dv = \oint_S [(\nabla G)\cdot\hat{n}]\,dS$$ The integrand of the surface integral is simply the directional derivative in the ##\hat{n}## direction, which is equal to ∂G/∂n, where n is the coordinate along the direction of ##\hat{n}##.
 
Thanks -- what was I thinking... G is a 1/r potential...
 
To solve this, I first used the units to work out that a= m* a/m, i.e. t=z/λ. This would allow you to determine the time duration within an interval section by section and then add this to the previous ones to obtain the age of the respective layer. However, this would require a constant thickness per year for each interval. However, since this is most likely not the case, my next consideration was that the age must be the integral of a 1/λ(z) function, which I cannot model.
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