These activities are intended to address the geometric nature of flux; flux, as used in physics, is the sum of the normal components of a vector field on a surface. Gauss's law uses a flux integral to find the electric field in situations with high symmetry. The first three activities are used in rapid succession to emphasize this geometry without introducing Gauss's law explicitly and make a stand-alone introduction to the geometry of flux. The sequence culminates in using Gauss's law to find the electric field from a highly symmetric charge distribution which provides students with a physical use for flux.
A charge $q$ sits at the corner of a cube. Find the flux of $\EE$ through each side of the cube. Do not do a long calculation (either by hand or by computer)!
Find the upward pointing flux of the electric field $\Vec E =E_0\, z\, \hat z$ through the part of the surface $z=-3 s^2 +12$ (cylindrical coordinates) that sits above the $(x, y)$–plane.