Introduction to Electrodynamics/Chapter 7/1

From Jonathan Gardner's Physics Notebook
< Introduction to Electrodynamics‎ | Chapter 7
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7.1 Electromotive Force

7.1.1 Ohm's Law

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Electrostatics and magnetostatics apply whenever <math>\rho\;</math> and <math>\vec{J}\;</math> are independent of time.

With steady currents, the charge density <math>\rho\;</math> remains constant. So you can have both steady currents and static charges at the same time.

One exception: <math>\vec{E} = 0\;</math> in a conductor. If this were so, you could not have a steady current inside a conductor.

For most substances,

<math>\vec{J} = \sigma \vec{f}\;</math>
  • <math>\sigma\;</math> is the conductivity of the material.
    • <math>\rho = 1/\sigma\;</math> is the resistivity of the material.
    • Insulators have a very small conductivity / very large resistivity, typically factor of 1,000,000,000,000,000,000!
    • perfect conductors have infinite conductivity / zero resistivity.
  • <math>\vec{f}\;</math> is the force per unit charge.
    • Could be ANY force, even gravity, etc... "trained ants with tiny harnesses" (haha)
    • We care about electromagnetic forces: <math>\vec{f} = \vec{E} + \vec{v} \times \vec{B}\;</math>
    • Normally, the magnetic force is too small: <math>\vec{f} = \vec{E}\;</math>

Ohm's Law is <math>\vec{J} = \sigma \vec{E}\;</math>, the current is proportional to the electric field.


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Example 1

A cylinder of constant cross-section has a potential put across the ends. How do the currents and potential relate?

First, we're going to assume that the electric field inside the cylinder is going to be constant. Example 3 explains why this is true.

Next, we relate current to the electric field:

TODO



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Example 2


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Example 3


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Problems

7.1.2 Electromotive Forces

Problems

7.1.3 Motional emf

Problems


Example 4