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Gauss's Law: Instructor's Guide

Main Ideas

Students' Task

Estimated Time: 60 minutes

Students are asked to work in groups to find the electric field using Gauss's Law for either a spherically or cylindrically symmetric charge density. Students must make explicit symmetry arguments using Proof by Contradiction as part of their solution.

Prerequisite Knowledge

  1. Students should know how to integrate non-constant charge densities to find total charge (see Total Charge Activity).
  2. Students should have some knowledge of electric fields

Props/Equipment

Activity: Introduction

We start this activity with a mini lecture about Gauss's Law.

Proof by Contradiction (“Little Observer” arguments)

Example: Infinite plane of charge

Activity: Student Conversations

Activity: Wrap-up

This is a compare and contrast activity. Some groups do cylindrical shell examples and some do spherical shell examples. As each group reports, it is important to bring out the fact that all examples have zero field inside the shell, different answers within the shell, and answers that depend only on the total charge on the shell for points outside the shell. A nice discussion of symmetry ensues.

We were surprised one year to ask the students about the analogous calculation with gravitational fields. They had been totally unimpressed that the electric field was zero inside the shell and were total impressed that the gravitational field would be zero inside the shell. Several students exclaimed: “Wow, you'd be floating!” Gravitational fields are much more intuitive and geometrically meaningful for many students than electric fields.

Extensions

This activity is the final activity of a sequence of activities on the Geometry of Flux.

This activity is included within a sequence of activities addressing Ampere’s law. The following activities are additional activities which are included within this sequence.

This activity is included within a sequence of activities addressing Gauss’s law in integral form. The following activities are part of this sequence and can be used as preparation for this activity.