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In this video, we're going to study the electric field
created by an infinite uniformly charged plate.
And why are we going to do that?
Well, one, because we'll learn that the electric field is
constant, which is neat by itself, and then that's kind
of an important thing to realize later when we talk
about parallel charged plates and capacitors, because our
physics book tells them that the field is constant, but
they never really prove it.
So we will prove it here, and the basis of all of that is to
figure out what the electric charge of an infinitely
charged plate is.
So let's take a side view of the infinitely charged plate
and get some intuition.
Let's say that's the side view of the plate-- and let's say
that this plate has a charge density of sigma.
And what's charge density?
It just says, well, that's coulombs per area.
Charge density is equal to charge per area.
That's all sigma is.
So we're saying this has a uniform charge density.
So before we break into what may be hard-core mathematics,
and if you're watching this in the calculus playlist, you
might want to review some of the electrostatics from the
physics playlist, and that'll probably be
relatively easy for you.
If you're watching this from the physics playlist and you
haven't done the calculus playlist, you should not watch
this video because you will find it overwhelming.
But anyway, let's proceed.
So let's say that once again this is my infinite so it goes
off in every direction and it even comes out of the video,
where this is a side view.
Let's say I have a point charge up here Q.
So let's think a little bit about if I have a point--
let's say I have an area here on my plate.
Let's think a little bit about what the net effect of it is
going to be on this point charge.
Well, first of all, let's say that this point charge is at a
height h above the field.
Let me draw that.
This is a height h, and let's say this is the point directly
below the point charge, and let's say that this distance
right here is r.
So first of all, what is the distance between this part of
our plate and our point charge?
What is this distance that I'll draw in magenta?
What is this distance?
Well, the Pythagorean theorem.
This is a right triangle, so it's the square root of this
side squared plus this side squared.
So this is going to be the square root of h
squared plus r squared.
So that's the distance between this area and our test charge.
Now, let's get a little bit of intuition.
So if this is a positive test charge and if this plate is
positively charged, the force from just this area on the
charge is going to be radially outward from this area, so
it's going to be-- let me do it in another color because I
don't want to-- it's going to go in that direction, right?
But since this is an infinite plate in every direction,
there's going to be another point on this plate that's
essentially on the other side of this point over here where
its net force, its net electrostatic force on the
point charge, is going to be like that.
And as you can see, since we have a uniform charge density
and the plate is symmetric in every direction, the x or the
horizontal components of the force are going to cancel out.
And so that's true for really any point along this plate.
Because if you pick any point along it, and we're looking at
a side view, but if we took a top view, if that's the top
view and, of course, the plate goes off in every direction
forever and that's kind of where our point charge is, if
we said, oh, well, you know, there's this point on the
plate and it's going to have some y-component that's on
this top view coming out of the video, but it'll have some
x-component, this point's x-component effect
will cancel it out.
You can always find another point on the plate that's
symmetrically opposite whose x-component of electrostatic
force will cancel out with the first one.
So given that, that's just a long-winded way of saying that
the net force on this point charge will only be upwards.
I think it should make sense to you that all of the
x-components or the horizontal components of the
electrostatic force all cancel out, because they're infinite
points to either side of this test charge.
So with that out of the way, what do we need to focus on?
Well, we just need to focus on the y-components of the
electrostatic force.
So what's the y-component?
So let's say that this point right here-- and I'll keep
switching colors.
Let's say that this point-- and once again, this is a side
view-- is exerting-- its field at that point is e1, and it's
going to be going in that direction.
What is its y-component?
What is the component in that direction?
And, of course, it's pushing outwards if
they're both positive.
So what is the y-component?
What is that?
Well, if we knew theta, if we knew this angle, the
y-component, or the upwards component is going to be the
electric field times cosine of theta.
Cosine is adjacent over hypotenuse, so hypotenuse
times cosine of theta is equal to the adjacent.
So if we wanted the vertical or the y-component of the
electric field, we would just multiply the magnitude of the
electric field times the cosine of theta.
So how do we figure out theta?
Well, that theta is also the same as this theta from our
basic trigonometry.
And so what's cosine of theta?
Cosine is adjacent over hypotenuse
from SOHCAHTOA, right?
Cosine of theta is equal to adjacent over hypotenuse.
So when we're looking at this angle, which is the same as
that one, what's adjacent over hypotenuse?
This is adjacent, that is the hypotenuse.
So what do we get?
We get that the y-component of the electric field due to just
this little chunk of our plate, the electric field in
the y-component, let's just call that sub 1 because this
is just a little small part of the plate.
It is equal to the electric field generally, the magnitude
of the electric field from this point, times cosine of
theta, which equals the electric field times the
adjacent-- times height-- over the hypotenuse-- over the
square root of h squared plus r squared.
Fair enough.
So now let's see if we can figure out what the magnitude
of the electric field is, and then we can put it back into
this and we'll figure out the y-component from this point.
And actually, we're not just going to figure out the
electric field just from that point, we're going to figure
out the electric field from a ring that's surrounding this.
So let me give you a little bit of perspective or draw it
with a little bit of perspective.
So this is my infinite plate again.
I'll draw it in yellow again since I
originally drew it in yellow.
This is my infinite plate.
It goes in every direction.
And then I have my charge floating above this plate
someplace at height of h.
And this point here, this could have been right here
maybe, but what I'm going to do is I'm going to draw a ring
that's of an equal radius around this point right here.
So this is r.
Let's draw a ring, because all of these points are going to
be the same distance from our test charge, right?
They all are exactly like this one point that I drew here.
You could almost view this as a cross-section of this ring
that I'm drawing.
So let's figure out what the y-component of the electric
force from this ring is on our point charge.
So to do that, we just have to figure out the area of this
ring, multiply it times our charge density, and we'll have
the total charge from that ring, and then we can use
Coulomb's Law to figure out its force or the field at that
point, and then we could use this formula, which we just
figured out, to figure out the y-component.
I know it's involved, but it'll all be worth it, because
you'll know that we have a constant electric field.
So let's do that.
So first of all, Coulomb's Law tells us-- well, first of all,
let's figure out the charge from this ring.
So Q of the ring, it equals what?
It equals the circumference of the ring times the
width of the ring.
So let's say the circumference is 2 pi r, and let's say it's
a really skinny ring.
It's really skinny.
It's dr. Infinitesimally skinny.
So it's width is dr. So that's the area of the ring, and so
what's its charge going to be?
It's area times the charge density, so times sigma.
That is the charge of the ring.
And then what is the electric field generated by the ring at
this point here where our test charge is?
Well, Coulomb's Law tells us that the force generated by
the ring is going to be equal to Coulomb's constant times
the charge of the ring times our test charge divided by the
distance squared, right?
Well, what's the distance between really any point on
the ring and our test charge?
Well, this could be one of the points on the ring and this
could be another one, right?
And this is like a cross-section.
So the distance at any point, this distance right here, is
once again by the Pythagorean theorem because
this is also r.
This distance is the square root of h
squared plus r squared.
It's the same thing as that.
So it's the distance squared and that's equal to k times
the charge in the ring times our test charge divided by
distance squared.
Well, distance is the square root of h squared plus r
squared, so if we square that, it just becomes h
squared plus r squared.
And if we want to know the electric field created by that
ring, the electric field is just the force per test
charge, so if we divide both sides by Q, we learned that
the electric field of the ring is equal to Coulomb's constant
times the charge in the ring divided by h
squared plus r squared.
And now what is the y-component of the
charge in the ring?
Well, it's going to be this, right?
What we just figured out is the magnitude of essentially
this vector, right?
But we want its y-component, because all of the
x-components just cancel out, so it's going to be times
cosine of theta, and we figured out that cosine of
theta is essentially this, so we multiply it times that.
So the field from the ring in the y-direction is going to be
equal to its magnitude times cosine of theta, which we
figured out was h over the square root of h
squared plus r squared.
We could simplify this a little bit.
The denominator becomes what?
h squared plus r squared to the 3/2 power.
And what's the numerator?
Let's see, we have kh and then the charge in the ring, which
we solved up here.
So that's 2 pi sigma r-- make sure I didn't lose anything--
dr. So we have just calculated the y-component, the vertical
component, of the electric field at h
units above the plate.
And not from the entire plate, just the electric field
generated by a ring of radius r from the base of where we're
taking this height.
And so I've already gone 12 minutes into this video, and
just to give you a break and myself a break, I will
continue in the next.
But you can imagine what we're going to do now.
We just figured out the electric field created by just
this ring, right?
So now we can integrate across the entire plane.
We can solve all the rings of radius infinity all the way
down to zero, and that'll give us the sum of all of the
electric fields and essentially the net electric
field h units above the surface of the plate.
See you in the next video.