πŸ”’ Master the Move β€” Gaussian Surfaces

Preview below. Unlock the full annotated breakdown, common traps, and the exam-speed variant at Black Belt.

πŸ₯‹ The Move

Gauss’s Law with symmetry β€” pick a surface that makes \(E\) constant over the surface (or zero on parts). Use for infinite planes, lines, and cylinders; spheres with spherical symmetry. Avoid when the symmetry doesn’t let \(E\) be constant on your surface.


πŸ“˜ Canonical Problem

An infinitely long cylinder of radius \(R\) has uniform volume charge density \(\rho\). Find the electric field magnitude \(E(r)\) for (i) \(r<R\) and (ii) \(r\ge R\).

  • Given: \(\rho,\ R,\ \varepsilon_0\)
  • Find: \(E(r)\) (radial) as a function of \(r\)
  • Assume: infinite cylinder; end effects neglected.

Sketch notes (no figure):

  • Choose a coaxial Gaussian cylinder: radius \(r\), length \(L\).
  • By symmetry, \(\vec E = E(r)\,\hat r\) is radial and constant on the curved surface; flux through endcaps is zero.
  • Gauss: \(\displaystyle \Phi_E=\oint \vec E\cdot d\vec A = \dfrac{Q_{\text{enc}}}{\varepsilon_0}\).

πŸ”Ž Setup (Preview)

  1. Surface + symmetry. Use curved area only: \(\Phi_E=E(r)\,(2\pi rL)\).
  2. Charge enclosed. Inside: \(Q_{\text{enc}}=\rho\,(\pi r^2 L)\). Outside: \(Q_{\text{enc}}=\rho\,(\pi R^2 L)\).

Full derivation, exam-speed form, and traps at Black Belt.


πŸ”’ Download (Black Belt+)