THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA
Physics 108
Assignment #
4:
GAUSS' LAW
Wed. 26 Jan. 2005 - finish by Wed. 2 Feb.
- FIELD WITHIN A UNIFORM CHARGE DISTRIBUTION:
The textbook shows how to use GAUSS' LAW to derive the
radial () dependence of the electric field
outside charge distributions of
spherical, cylindrical or planar symmetry,
where is the distance the charge distribution extends
from the centre of symmetry - the radius of a
charged sphere or cylinder, or half the thickness
of an infinite slab of charge, respectively.
Use similar arguments to show that, for each of these cases
(a sphere, cylinder or a slab of uniform charge density),
the electric field inside the charge distribution
is given in terms of the field at the boundary
of the charge distribution by
- ATOMS AS SPHERES OF CHARGE:
In Rutherford's work on particle scattering from atomic nuclei,
he regarded the atom as having a point-like positive charge of
at its centre, surrounded by a spherical volume of radius filled
with a uniform charge density that makes up a total charge ,
making the atom as a whole electrically neutral.
In this simple model, calculate the electric field strength
and the electric potential
as functions of radius and various constants.
Plot your results for .
(Choose
.)
- TUBEWORLD:1
In a future interstellar voyage, you come across a gigantic
hollow cylinder a million km long with an outer radius of 1000 km.
It is spinning on its axis at an angular frequency , but
with deft piloting you are able to land your spaceship
at what looks like a dock halfway down the cylinder.
As you approach, you find that the landing is easy because
there is just enough gravitational attraction toward the surface
to provide the acceleration you need to be in a circular orbit
when you land at the dock. When you leave
your craft in a spacesuit, you seem to be weightless.
Now you see a door in the cylinder with a button labelled,
"Press to open," so you do. A hatch opens and you step through into
an airlock; the outer hatch closes, it fills with breathable air at
1 Earth atmosphere and then the inner hatch opens, revealing a hollow
interior filled with air and light from a long line source down
the axis of the cylinder. As you stand on the inner surface
you experience an apparent Earth-normal gravity of "1 g"
pulling you toward the surface (away from the axis).
Many interesting creatures live here, but before we go meet them
I have a few Answers and Questions. First the Answers:
Virtually all the mass of the cylinder is in the thin shell
through which you just stepped. It is made of a very
dense material! Although this all requires technology beyond
our present grasp,2 none of it is in conflict with the "known laws of physics"
and you have all the tools you need to answer the Questions:
- How long does it take for the cylinder to spin once about its axis?
- What is the net mass of the cylinder, and how does it compare
with the mass of the Earth? With the mass of the Sun?
Jess H. Brewer
2005-01-22