Give step-by-step solution with explanation and final answer:3 Respecto de x < 0, 7 = 5 sin(ay) dy, donde a 3 Una CONSIante halle Pye: ¥ Pass: HOGA un esquema de como estd el campo
Question:
Give step-by-step solution with explanation and final answer:
3 Respecto de x < 0, 7 = 5 sin(ay) dy, donde a 3 Una CONSIante halle Pye: ¥ Pass: HOGA un
esquema de como estd el campo
This is AI generated Response.
Asked by: Ratan
Created at: 2025-06-21 03:14:34
Asked by: Ratan
Created at: 2025-06-21 03:14:34
Final Answer:
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Let's break down the problem step by step:
### **Problem Statement (translated):**
> With respect to \(x < 0\), \(\vec{P} = 5\sin(\alpha y) \hat{a}_x\), where \(\alpha\) is a constant. Find \(\rho_{pol}\) and \(\rho_{psup}\). Draw a sketch of the \(\vec{P}\) field.
---
### **Step 1: Understanding the Variables**
- \(\vec{P}\): Polarization vector
- \(\rho_{pol}\): Volume bound charge density
- \(\rho_{psup}\): Surface bound charge density
---
### **Step 2: Relevant Formulas**
- **Volume bound charge density:**
\[
\rho_{pol} = -\nabla \cdot \vec{P}
\]
- **Surface bound charge density:**
\[
\rho_{psup} = \vec{P} \cdot \hat{n}
\]
where \(\hat{n}\) is the normal vector to the surface.
---
### **Step 3: Compute \(\rho_{pol}\)**
Given:
\[
\vec{P} = 5\sin(\alpha y)\hat{a}_x
\]
Calculate the divergence:
\[
\nabla \cdot \vec{P} = \frac{\partial}{\partial x} P_x + \frac{\partial}{\partial y} P_y + \frac{\partial}{\partial z} P_z
\]
Here,
- \(P_x = 5\sin(\alpha y)\)
- \(P_y = 0\)
- \(P_z = 0\)
So,
\[
\nabla \cdot \vec{P} = \frac{\partial}{\partial x} [5\sin(\alpha y)] + 0 + 0 = 0
\]
Therefore,
\[
\rho_{pol} = -\nabla \cdot \vec{P} = 0
\]
---
### **Step 4: Compute \(\rho_{psup}\)**
At the surface \(x = 0\), the normal vector is \(\hat{n} = \hat{a}_x\) (points outward).
\[
\rho_{psup} = \vec{P} \cdot \hat{n} = 5\sin(\alpha y)
\]
But for \(x < 0\), \(\vec{P} = 5\sin(\alpha y)\hat{a}_x\), and for \(x > 0\), it's assumed that \(\vec{P} = 0\) (since it's not defined there).
So at the surface \(x = 0\):
\[
\rho_{psup} = \vec{P}(x=0^-) \cdot \hat{a}_x - \vec{P}(x=0^+) \cdot \hat{a}_x = 5\sin(\alpha y) - 0 = 5\sin(\alpha y)
\]
---
### **Step 5: Field Sketch**
- For \(x < 0\): The vectors point along the \(x\)-axis, and their magnitude varies sinusoidally with \(y\).
- For \(x > 0\): \(\vec{P} = 0\).
A simple sketch would show arrows along \(x\) (left half-plane), with their lengths varying as \(\sin(\alpha y)\).
---
### **Final Answers**
\[
\boxed{
\begin{aligned}
&\rho_{pol} = 0 \\
&\rho_{psup} = 5\sin(\alpha y)
\end{aligned}
}
\]
**Field Sketch:**
- Draw the \(y\)-axis vertically, \(x\)-axis horizontally.
- For \(x < 0\), draw arrows along \(x\) whose length varies as \(\sin(\alpha y)\).
- For \(x > 0\), no arrows.
Let me know if you need the actual sketch!
Question:
give answer in 2 step with explanation at the end of each step and final answer at the end:
This is AI generated Response.
Asked by: Ratan
Created at: 2025-06-21 03:15:40
Asked by: Ratan
Created at: 2025-06-21 03:15:40
Final Answer:
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**Step 1: Calculate the volume bound charge density \(\rho_{pol}\).**
Given the polarization vector:
\[
\vec{P} = 5 \sin(\alpha y) \hat{a}_x
\]
which depends only on \(y\), and points along the \(x\)-direction.
The bound volume charge density is:
\[
\rho_{pol} = - \nabla \cdot \vec{P}
\]
Since \(\vec{P}\) has only an \(x\)-component that varies with \(y\):
\[
\nabla \cdot \vec{P} = \frac{\partial P_x}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial P_y}{\partial y} + \frac{\partial P_z}{\partial z}
\]
Here:
- \(P_x = 5 \sin(\alpha y)\)
- \(P_y = 0\)
- \(P_z = 0\)
Calculating derivatives:
\[
\frac{\partial P_x}{\partial x} = 0 \quad \text{(no } x \text{-dependence)}
\]
\[
\frac{\partial P_y}{\partial y} = 0
\]
\[
\frac{\partial P_z}{\partial z} = 0
\]
Therefore:
\[
\nabla \cdot \vec{P} = 0
\]
and so:
\[
\rho_{pol} = - 0 = 0
\]
---
**Step 2: Calculate the surface bound charge density \(\rho_{psup}\).**
The surface charge density at the interface (say, at \(x=0\)) is:
\[
\rho_{psup} = \vec{P} \cdot \hat{n}
\]
where \(\hat{n}\) is the outward normal to the surface.
- For the surface at \(x=0\), the normal vector pointing toward \(x>0\) is \(\hat{a}_x\).
- The polarization just inside the surface (for \(x<0\)) is:
\[
\vec{P} = 5 \sin(\alpha y) \hat{a}_x
\]
- Outside (for \(x>0\)), \(\vec{P} \approx 0\).
Thus:
\[
\rho_{psup} = \left.\vec{P}\right|_{x=0^-} \cdot \hat{a}_x = 5 \sin(\alpha y)
\]
**Final Answer:**
\[
\boxed{
\begin{aligned}
\rho_{pol} &= 0 \\
\rho_{psup} &= 5 \sin(\alpha y)
\end{aligned}
}
\]
**Explanation:**
- The volume bound charge density is zero because the divergence of \(\vec{P}\) is zero; \(\vec{P}\) varies only with \(y\), but its \(x\)-component's partial derivative with respect to \(x\) is zero.
- The surface bound charge appears where \(\vec{P}\) discontinuously changes at the boundary \(x=0\), resulting in a surface charge density proportional to \(\sin(\alpha y)\).
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