Electrostatics toolbox
This toolbox is dedicated to the resolution of electrostatics problems.
The starting point is the Maxwell equations.
1. Quasi static approximation, Electrostatics
A consequence of Maxwell’s equations is that changes in time of currents and charges are not synchronized with changes of the electromagnetic fields. There is a delay between the changes of the sources and the changes of the fields. The electromagnetic waves propagate at finite speed. If we ignore this effect, we obtain the electromagnetic fields by considering stationary currents at every instant. In other words, it is the study of electromagnetism with charges at rest.
It is called the quasi-static approximation also called electrostatics and magnetostatics approximations |
The approximation is valid provided that the variations in time are small or absent and that the studied geometries are considerably smaller than the wavelength. The quasi-static approximation implies that the equation of continuity can be written as
and that the time derivative of the electric displacement ∂D/∂t can be disregarded in Maxwell-Ampère’s law.
2. Notations and Units
Notation | Quantity | Unit | SI |
---|---|---|---|
E(x,t) |
electric field intensity |
V⋅m−1 |
kg⋅m⋅s−3⋅A−1 |
V(x,t) |
electric potential |
V |
kg⋅m2⋅s−3⋅A−1 |
D(x,t) |
electric flux density |
C⋅m−2 |
A⋅s⋅m−2 |
J(x,t) |
electric current density |
A⋅m−2 |
A⋅m−2 |
ρ(x,t) |
electric charge density |
C⋅m−3 |
A⋅s⋅m−3 |
Ei(x,t) |
impressed electric field |
V⋅m−1 |
kg⋅m⋅s−3⋅A−1 |
Ji(x,t) |
impressed electric current |
A⋅m−2 |
A⋅m−2 |
σ(x,t) |
conductivity |
S⋅m−1 |
kg−1⋅m−3⋅s3⋅A2 |
ϵ0(x,t) |
permittivity of vacuum |
F⋅m−1 |
kg−1⋅m−3⋅s4⋅A2 |
3. Equations
Consider that
-
we are in quasi-electrostatics approximation,
-
we have N conducting materials whose respective domains are denoted Ωi,i=1...N and their electric conductivity σi.
The electric potential is solution of the following equation
where q is the charge density and ε0 is the vacuum permittivity. This relationship is a form of Poisson’s equation. In the absence of electric charge, the equation becomes Laplace’s equation:
We have the following relations:
where σ=σi,i=1...N.