Linear Charge Gauss’s Law Model: A Clear Introduction

Applying Gauss’s Law to Linear Charge Distributions

Overview

Gauss’s Law relates the electric flux through a closed surface to the enclosed charge: ∮ E · dA = Q_enclosed / ε0. For linear charge distributions (charge distributed along a line, e.g., a long charged wire), exploit symmetry to choose a Gaussian surface that makes E constant over portions of the surface so the integral simplifies.

Common cases & Gaussian surfaces

  1. Infinitely long straight line of charge (uniform linear charge density λ)

    • Symmetry: cylindrical symmetry — field points radially outward and depends only on radial distance r.
    • Gaussian surface: coaxial cylinder of radius r and length L.
    • Flux: only the curved side contributes; top and bottom caps have E perpendicular to area and contribute zero.
    • Calculation:
      • Q_enclosed = λL
      • ∮ E·dA = E(2πrL)
      • E® = λ / (2π ε0 r)
  2. Finite line (approximate by infinite for r much smaller than length)

    • Use the infinite-wire result as an approximation when the wire length ≫ observation distance. For points comparable to the wire length, use Coulomb’s law or integrate contributions from each element of charge; Gauss’s Law with a simple surface no longer applies because symmetry is broken.
  3. Line charge inside coaxial cylindrical shell

    • For inner radius a and outer radius b, use concentric cylindrical Gaussian surfaces to find fields in regions rb, applying enclosed-charge piecewise.
  4. Line charge near conductors

    • Image charges or boundary conditions are typically required; choose Gaussian surfaces that respect conductor surfaces (E inside conductor = 0). Gauss’s Law helps determine net enclosed charge but not easily the detailed field without symmetry.

Steps to apply Gauss’s Law (practical recipe)

  1. Identify symmetry (cylindrical for an infinite straight line).
  2. Choose Gaussian surface aligned with symmetry (coaxial cylinder).
  3. Determine which surface elements have nonzero E·dA and whether E is constant over them.
  4. Compute Q_enclosed by integrating charge density over the enclosed length.
  5. Evaluate ∮ E·dA and solve for E.

Key formulas

  • Electric field of infinite line: E® = λ / (2π ε0 r) (radial)
  • Flux through cylindrical surface: Φ = E(2πrL)
  • Q_enclosed for length L: Q = λL

Limitations & tips

  • Gauss’s Law is always true but only easily useful when symmetry makes E constant over parts of the Gaussian surface.
  • For finite lines, off-axis points, or asymmetric setups, prefer direct integration using Coulomb’s law or numerical methods.
  • Use piecewise Gaussian surfaces for concentric regions (e.g., between conductors) and enforce boundary conditions at conductor surfaces.

Example (brief)

For λ = 5×10^-9 C/m, at r = 0.02 m: E = λ / (2π ε0 r) ≈ (5e-9) / (2π · 8.85e-12 · 0.02) ≈ 4500 N/C (radial outward).

If you want, I can provide a full derivation, diagrams, or a finite-wire integration example.

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