Solving Laplace's Equation
Prerequisites
Students should be familiar with:
- Gauss's law for electric fields.
- How a test charge behaves in the presence of an electric field.
Prerequisites
Students should be familiar with:
- Solving PDEs using separation of variables (e.g., for the wave equation, heat equation, Schrodinger equation, etc.)
- Expressing a function in terms of a Fourier series, finding the expansion coefficients, and writing out a full Fourier series solution.
- How to plot functions of two (or three) variables in a computer software program like Mathematica.
In-class Content
- Properties of Conductors (lec - 15 min)
- Charges in Conductors (Kinesthetic Activity - 10 min)
- Poisson's and Laplace's Equation (lec - 5 min)
- Concavity and Curvature (SWBQ+ - 15 min)
- Review of Separation of Variables (lec - 10 min)
- Review of Boundary Conditions (SGA - 25 min)
- Solving Laplace for $V(x,b)=V_0\sin\left(n\pi x/a\right)$ (SGA - 30 min + 20 min graphing)
- Solving Laplace for superpositions (SGA - 30 min)
Optional In-class Content
- Relaxation Technique for Solving Laplace's Equation (SGA - good for a computation class)
- Conductors (SGA) (optional)
Homework for Static Fields
- (Capacitor) Examine the electric field of a parallel plane capacitor through superposition.We know that the electric field everywhere in space due to an infinite plane of charge with charge density located in the $xy$-plane at $z=0$ is \begin{equation*} \EE(z) = \begin{cases}\displaystyle +{\sigma\over2\epsilon_0}\>\zhat & z>0 \cr \noalign{\smallskip}\displaystyle -{\sigma\over2\epsilon_0}\>\zhat & z<0 \end{cases} \end{equation*} (Mentally check that this is true for both positive and negative values of $\sigma$.) - Sketch the $z$-component of the electric field as a function of $z$. 
- Draw a similar picture, and write a function that expresses the electric field everywhere in space, for an infinite conducting slab in the $xy$-plane, of thickness $d$ in the $z$-direction, that has a charge density $+|\sigma|$ on each surface. 
- Repeat for a charge density $-|\sigma|$ on each surface. 
- Now imagine two {\bf conductors}, one each of the two types described above, separated by a distance $L$. Use the principle of superposition to find the electric field everywhere. Discuss whether your answer is reasonable. Does it agree with the known fact that the electric field inside a conductor is zero? Has superposition been correctly applied? Is Gauss' Law correct? Try to resolve any inconsistencies. 
 
- (ConductorsGEM235) A long problem about the charge density, potential, and electric field due to a conducting sphere surrounded by a conducting shell, from Griffiths E&M book.A metal sphere of radius $R$, carrying charge $q$ is surrounded by a thick concentric metal shell (inner radius $a$, outer radius $b$, as shown below). The shell carries no net charge. \medskip \centerline{\includegraphics[scale=1]{\TOP Figures/vfconductor}} \medskip - Find the surface charge density $\sigma$ at $R$, at $a$, and at $b$. 
- Find $E_r$, the radial component of the electric field and plot it as a function of $r$. Are the discontinuities in the electric field related to the charge density in the way you expect from previous problems? 
- Find the potential at the center of the sphere, using infinity as the reference point. 
- Now the outer surface is touched to a grounding wire, which lowers its potential to zero (the same as infinity). How do your answers to a), b), and c) change? 
 
Homework for Static Fields
- (LaplacePractice)Laplace's equation in two dimensions is: $\frac{\partial^2 V}{\partial x^2} + \frac{\partial^2 V}{\partial y^2} = 0$. Assume the region if interest is a rectangle of width $a$ and height $b$. - Use separation of variables to find the general solution to Laplace's equation in two dimensions. 
- Suppose three of the boundaries ($x=0$, $x=a$, and $y=0$) are known to have $V=0$. Find the general solution in this case. 
- Suppose only one boundary ($y=0$) is known to have $V=0$, and that two boundaries ($x=0$ and $x=a$) are known to have $\frac{\partial V}{\partial x} = 0$. Find the general solution in this case. 
 
- (Laplace)Consider the bounded two-dimensional region from class. Three sides are metal and held at $V = 0$ while one is an insulator on which the potential is known to be: $V(x, b) = V_0\left(\sin\left(\frac{\pi x}{a}\right) + \sin\left(\frac{2\pi x}{a}\right) - \sin\left(\frac{3\pi x}{a}\right) \right)$ - Starting from the general solution from the practice problem, find a symbolic expression for the potential $V(x, y)$. 
- Make several plots of your solution and discuss any interesting features you find. (I particularly recommend both surface plots and plots of $x$- and $y$-cross sections at several different values.) 
- Suppose that the fourth side of the region is also a conductor at constant potential $V_0$. Find a symbolic expression for $V(x, y)$, graph your solution, and discuss its features. 
 






