What is the Electric Field in a Cylindrical Sheath?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the electric field in a non-conducting cylindrical sheath with specified inner and outer radii and a uniform charge density. For r=5, the electric field is zero since it lies outside the sheath. At r=12, the charge enclosed must be calculated using the volume of the sheath between r=10 and r=12, while at r=17, the entire sheath volume from r=10 to r=15 is used. The correct formula for the electric field involves the charge density and the geometry of the sheath. Understanding how to find the volume between two cylindrical radii is crucial for solving the problem.
abcdmichelle
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Homework Statement


A non-conducting, infinitely long, cylindrical sheath has inner radius r=10 m, outer radius r=15 m and a uniform charge density of 9 nC/m^3 spread throughout the sheath. Magnitude of electric field at r=5, r=12, r=17?


Homework Equations


Q=rho(Volume) and phi=EA therefore phi=E(2pi(R)length)
phi=Q/epsilon_0


The Attempt at a Solution


At r=5, Electric field=0
At r=12, phi=Q/epsilon_0, so E(2pi(R)length)=Q/epsilon_0
I just don't know what Q will be.
The same for r=17, I don't know how to find Q.
 
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You are given the charge density. Figure out the volume of sheath enclosed in each case.
 
Thank you Doc Al!

So for r=17, if R is the outer radius of the sheath, then
Q=rho(length)piR^2, so E=(rho(length)piR^2)/(2pi(length)r(epsilon_o), thus
E=(rhoR^2)/(2r(epsilon_o))
is that correct, where i would use r=17 and R=15??
I still don't know how I would figure out E for r=12, the area IN the sheath.

Please help! :)
 
abcdmichelle said:
Thank you Doc Al!

So for r=17, if R is the outer radius of the sheath, then
Q=rho(length)piR^2, so E=(rho(length)piR^2)/(2pi(length)r(epsilon_o), thus
E=(rhoR^2)/(2r(epsilon_o))
is that correct, where i would use r=17 and R=15??
I still don't know how I would figure out E for r=12, the area IN the sheath.

Please help! :)
The sheath only starts at r = 10m and extends to r = 15m. So to find the charge contained in a Gaussian surface with radius 12m, you need the volume of the sheath from r = 10 to 12 m. Similarly, for r = 17 you'd use the entire sheath, so from r = 10 to 15 m.

Hint: To find the volume between r1 and r2, find the volume of each full cylinder and subtract.
 
Thank you very very much Doc Al! This makes so much sense!
 
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