Exam 1 Laundry List PH 316 Fall 2000 - Added
items are in brown.
- set up an integral for E or V on the axis of a disc of
radius R and uniform charge density sigma
 
- set up an integral for E or V on the axis of a cylinder
of uniform charge density rho
 
- set up an integral for E or V at a point (x,y) from a
line of uniform charge density
 
- Give the definition of curl in terms of circulation and
area
 
- State Stokes' theorem, having to do with circulation
and curl
 
- Give the definition of divergence in terms of flux and
volume
 
- State Gauss' theorem, having to do with flux and divergence
 
- show that the gradient of 1/s is -s/s^3, where
s is the magnitude of r-r'
 
- from V = integral k rho dv/s and E = integral k rho (-s/s^3)
dv that E =- grad V
 
- Use Gauss's law and Gauss's theorem
to show div E = rho/epsilon_0 [pp. 68-69]
 
- Use Gauss's law to find E given
a symmetrical charge distribution [sect 2.2.3]
 
- State integral form of gauss's law, having to do with
flux and charge
 
- State the 'point' form of Gauss's law, having to do with
divergence
 
- From E = - grad V and Gauss's law, obtain
poisson's equation: 
the laplacian of V = -rho/epsilon_o 
- When rho =0 (no raw charges) we have laplace's equation,
laplacian V = 0.
 
- Electric conductors 
 
- Argue for zero electric field inside a static conductor
 
- Argue for curl E = 0 for any static electric field
 
- Use Gauss's law to show Esurface = 4 pi k sigma
 
- Argue for Esurface being perpendicular to the surface
 
- Argue for a 'local' electric field at the surface of
2 pi k sigma
 
- Be able to interpret electric potential values near a
conductor so as to estimate the surface charge distribution in a flat region
compared to near a sharp corner (as was done with
some spreadsheet data).
 
- Laplace's equation
 
- the average of V over a spherical surface is V at the
center of the sphere
 
- in 2-d, on a spreadsheet V at the center cell is the
average of the four surrounding cells
 
- show that in rectangular coordinates in 2-d (x,y) when
we separate variables, one coordinate (x or y) will have solutions which
are sines and cosines, and the other coordinate (y or x) will have solutions
which are exponentials.
 
- be ready to solve laplace's equation iteratively on a
spreadsheet using the averaging property
 
- Be able to expand a function in
terms of a binomial series, or a taylor series.