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Introductory Physics Homework Help
Use Gauss' Law to find E-field, tricky problem
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[QUOTE="rude man, post: 6066645, member: 350494"] I deleted my last post since it was misleading. There is only one integration, to find the field from r=0 to r=R, which finds Q(r). At r=R you have Q(R). Beyond Q(R) there are no more integrations, just applying Gauss's law again. [/QUOTE]
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Use Gauss' Law to find E-field, tricky problem
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