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Electrostatic Potential Due to Two Point Charges: Instructor's Guide

Main Ideas

Students' Task

Estimated Time: 50 min; Wrap-up: 30 min

Students work in small groups to find the electrostatic potential due to two electric charges separated by a distance $D$. Different groups are assigned different arrangements of charges and different regions of space to consider. Each group is asked to find a power series expansion for the electrostatic potential, valid in their group's assigned region of space.

Prerequisites

Props/Equipment

Activity: Introduction

Students typically know the electrostatic formula $V=\frac{kq}{r}$. We begin this activity with a short lecture/discussion that generalizes this formula in a coordinate independent way to the situation where the source is moved away from the origin to the point $r'$, $V=\frac{kq}{|\Vec r - \Vec r'|}$. The lecture should also review the superposition principle. The general, coordinate-independent formula should be left on the board for them to consult as they do this activity.

A nice warm-up (SWBQ) to lead off the discussion: Write down the electrostatic potential everywhere in space due to a point charge that is not at the origin.

Activity: Student Conversations

Activity: Wrap-up

Each of the eight groups should have an opportunity to present their results to the class such that everyone can see their work. If facilities permit, this is ideally done on large whiteboards around the room.

Compare and contrast

The instructor should encourage students to compare and contrast the results for the eight situations. This should include careful attention to:

  1. whether the power series is odd or even and how this relates to whether the situation is symmetric or anti-symmetric;
  2. whether the answers “make sense” given the physical situation

and what they tell you about how the field changes along the given axis.

Consideration of the 3-dimensional case

Most students will have thought about this problem entirely within two dimensions. They should be asked to consider points with a non-zero z component. Envisioning the three-dimensional potential field will help students towards the types of thinking they will need to apply to future problems.

Laurent Series

Assuming that students have not yet been exposed to Laurent series, it should be brought to their attention that a series involving inverse powers of the variable is not a power series at all; it is a generalization of a power series called a Laurent series. Students do not need to be familiar with this concept before the beginning of the activity. The difference between power series and Laurent series emerges naturally in the wrap-up. We have found that by introducing Laurent series in this context, students see it as no big deal.

Extensions

This activity is the final activity of a sequence of activities addressing Power Series and their application to physics. The following activities are part of this sequence.

This is first activity of the Ring Sequence, which uses a sequence of activities with similar geometries to help students learn how to solve a hard activity by breaking it up into several steps (A Master's Thesis about the Ring Sequence). The other activities in the sequence are: