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Calculating Flux: Instructor's Guide

Main Ideas

Students' Task

Estimated Time: 30 minutes

Prompt: Find the flux through a right cone of height $H$ from the vector field $\Vec{F} = C\,z\,\hat{k}$ (see reflections for a discussion of this vector field choice).

This prompt is open-ended in that it doesn't specify either the location of the cone or whether or not the circular top of the cone is to be considered part of the surface. We like to leave it open-ended, see what students do, and when students question the open-endedness, give a mini-“sermon” on the ill-posedness of most real world problems. If you are short of time, or otherwise want to avoid these questions, you should use a more explicit prompt.

If you choose the point of the cone at the origin (and allow it to open upward, like an icecream cone), then the problem can be solved in spherical coordinates as well as the obvious cylindrical coordinates. This is an interesting example of the fact that it is often easier to do surface integrals with cylindrical symmetry in spherical coordinates.

Prerequisite Knowledge

Students should be familiar

Props/Equipment

Activity: Lead-In

Short lecture introducing the concept of flux (as the amount of a vector field perpendicular to a surface) and how to calculate it: $$ \Phi = \int_S\, \Vec{F}\, \cdot \,d\Vec{A}$$

Activity: Student Conversations

Activity: Wrap-up

We do a brief summary of the main points to wrap up the activity.

Extensions

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