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Thread: Potential Difference in a varying field

Started 3 months, 2 weeks ago by exitwound
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data 2. Relevant equations 3. The attempt at a solution Can I assume that the is 0? At this point, what is done?
Site: Physics Help and Math Help - Physics Forums  Physics Help and Math Help - Physics Forums - site profile
Forum: Introductory Physics  Introductory Physics - forum profile
Total authors: 2 authors
Total thread posts: 12 posts
Thread activity: no new posts during last week
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kuruman replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
You need limits of integration. What are they? Also you need a path from A to B. You can pick any path, but some are more convenient than others. Finally, it would pay to write the electric field and element ds in unit vector notation first, then take the dot product between them.

exitwound replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
So we call point C the origin (0,0), and take the path from A-->C and then from C-->B, finding the potential difference between the points on the first segment, then the difference on the second segment. And then from C-->B And now what?

kuruman replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
The integral from A to C is correctly calculated to be zero. For the second integral, you have element ds. Look at your path, you are moving along the x-axis, what is a better name for ds? What are your limits of integration?

exitwound replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
dS is the path from c-->b. Obviously, i don't know how to set up the integral.

kuruman replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
No, ds is a small increment along the path from C to B. This path is along the x-axis, so if you chop it up into many small increments, you are chopping up the x-axis into small increments and a small increment along the x-axis is traditionally called ...

exitwound replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
(I meant the integral of dS, the sum of all the dS's was the path. sorry.) A small differential on the x-axis would be dx.

kuruman replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Correct, it is dx. So when you go from C to B x varies from what to what value? These are your limits of integration.

exitwound replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
So..what its..

kuruman replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
Looks good except for the minus sign that you dropped. Now finish the evaluation and you are done.

exitwound replied 3 months, 2 weeks ago
So I'm confused. Is the answer 2.88 or -2.88? It's asking for the potential difference Vb-Va

 

Top contributing authors

Name
Posts
exitwound
6
user's latest post:
Potential Difference in a...
Published (2009-09-12 13:48:00)
1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known data 2. Relevant equations 3. The attempt at a solution Can I assume that the is 0? At this point, what is done?
kuruman
6
user's latest post:
Potential Difference in a...
Published (2009-09-12 14:54:00)
Looks good except for the minus sign that you dropped. Now finish the evaluation and you are done.

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