What are the differences between scalar and vector flux in electromagnetism?

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SUMMARY

The discussion clarifies the distinctions between scalar and vector flux in electromagnetism. Scalar flux represents the total flow through a surface, measured in webers for magnetic flux and volt-metres for electric flux. The integral of the electric field's normal component over a surface defines scalar flux, while vector flux, or flux density, is the density of this flow per unit area. Key equations include Gauss' Law and the Ampère-Maxwell Law, which relate scalar flux to enclosed charge and current, respectively.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of Gauss' Law and its applications in electromagnetism
  • Familiarity with Maxwell's equations and their integral forms
  • Knowledge of electric and magnetic fields, including their units and measurements
  • Basic calculus for evaluating surface integrals
NEXT STEPS
  • Study the derivation and applications of Gauss' Law in various geometries
  • Explore the implications of the Ampère-Maxwell Law in circuit analysis
  • Learn about the physical significance of electric and magnetic flux densities
  • Investigate the relationship between flux and electromagnetic wave propagation
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Definition/Summary

Flux sometimes means total flow through a surface (a scalar), and sometimes means flow per unit area (a vector).

In electromagnetism, flux always means total flow through a surface (a scalar), and is measured in webers (magnetic flux) or volt-metres (electric flux).

Scalar flux is the amount of a vector field going through a surface: it is the integral (over the surface) of the normal component of the field: \Phi\ =\ \oint_S\mathbf{E}\cdot d\mathbf{A}

For a closed surface, this equals (Gauss' theorem, or the divergence theorem) the integral (over the interior) of the divergence of the field: \Phi\ =\ \int\int\int_V \mathbf{\nabla}\cdot\mathbf{E}\,dxdydz.

Therefore the scalar flux, through a closed surface, of an electric field is proportional to the enclosed charge (Gauss' law: \Phi_{E}\ =\ Q_{total}/\varepsilon_0,\ \ \Phi_{D}\ =\ Q_{free}/\varepsilon_0,\ \ \Phi_{P}\ =\ -Q_{bound}/\varepsilon_0), and of a magnetic field is zero (Gauss' law for magnetism: \Phi_{B}\ =\ \Phi_{H}\ =\ \Phi_{M}\ =\ 0).

Equations

FLUX THROUGH A CLOSED SURFACE, S:

Gauss' Law:

\Phi_\mathbf{E}(S)\ =\ \oint_S\mathbf{E}\cdot d\mathbf{A}\ =\ Q/\varepsilon_0

Gauss' Law for Magnetism:

\Phi_\mathbf{B}(S)\ =\ \oint_S\mathbf{B}\cdot d\mathbf{A}\ =\ 0

RATE OF CHANGE OF FLUX THROUGH A CLOSED CURVE, C:

Ampère-Maxwell Law:

\mu_0\varepsilon_0\frac{\partial\Phi_\mathbf{E}(S)}{\partial t}\ =\ \mu_0\varepsilon_0\frac{\partial}{\partial t}\int_S\mathbf{E}\cdot d\mathbf{A}\ =\ \oint_C\mathbf{B}\cdot d\mathbf{\ell}\ -\ \mu_0I

Faraday's law:

\frac{\partial\Phi_\mathbf{B}(S)}{\partial t}\ =\ \frac{\partial}{\partial t}\int_S \mathbf{B}\cdot d\mathbf{A}\ =\ -\oint_C\mathbf{E}\cdot d\mathbf{\ell}

E and B are the electric and magnetic fields; a closed surface is the boundary of a volume, and Q is the charge within that volume; in the last two laws, S is any surface whose boundary is the closed curve C; I is the current passing through C or S; the symbol \oint indicates that the integral is over a closed surface or curve

those are the flux (or integral) versions of the total-charge versions of Maxwell's equations; there are also free-charge versions of Gauss' law and the Ampère-Maxwell law which use D H free charge and free current:

Gauss' Law:

\Phi_\mathbf{D}(S)\ =\ \oint_S\mathbf{D}\cdot d\mathbf{A}\ =\ Q_{free}

Ampère-Maxwell Law:

\frac{\partial\Phi_\mathbf{D}(S)}{\partial t}\ =\ \frac{\partial}{\partial t}\int_S\mathbf{D}\cdot d\mathbf{A}\ =\ \oint_C\mathbf{H}\cdot d\mathbf{\ell}\ -\ I_{free}

Extended explanation

Scalar flux vs vector flux:

The vector form of flux is the density (per area, not the usual density per volume :wink:) of the scalar form of flux.

In electromagnetism, it is called the flux density …

ie, in electromagnetism, flux is flow across a surface, and flux density is the density (per area) of that flow;

flux in other topics, is the same as flux density in electromagnetism.​

Flux density in electromagnetism:

Magnetic flux, \Phi_m, is a scalar, measured in webers (or volt-seconds), and is a total amount measured across a surface (ie, you don't have flux at a point).

Magnetic flux density, \mathbf{B}, is a vector, measured in webers per square metre (or teslas), and exists at each point.

The flux across a surface S is the integral of the magnetic flux density over that surface:
\Phi_m\ =\ \int\int_S\ \mathbf{B}\cdot d\mathbf{S}​
(and is zero across a closed surface)

Magnetic flux density is what physicists more commonly call the magnetic field. :rolleyes:

It is a density per area, rather than the usual density per volume.

Similarly, electric flux, \Phi_e, is a scalar, measured in volt-metres, and electric flux density (also a density per area), \mathbf{E}, is a vector, measured in volts per metre (and is more commonly called the electric field).​

* This entry is from our old Library feature. If you know who wrote it, please let us know so we can attribute a writer. Thanks!
 
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