In electromagnetism, electric flux is the total electric field that crosses a given surface. The electric flux through a closed surface is directly proportional to the total charge contained within that surface.
The electric field E can exert a force on an electric charge at any point in space. The electric field is the gradient of the electric potential.
For a non-uniform electric field, the electric flux through a small surface area is given by (the electric field, , multiplied by the component of area perpendicular to the field). The electric flux over a surface is therefore given by the surface integral: where is the electric field and is an infinitesimal area on the surface with an outward facing surface normal defining its direction.
For a closed Gaussian surface, electric flux is given by:
where
While the electric flux is not affected by charges that are not within the closed surface, the net electric field, can be affected by charges that lie outside the closed surface. While Gauss's law holds for all situations, it is most useful for "by hand" calculations when high degrees of symmetry exist in the electric field. Examples include spherical and cylindrical symmetry.
The SI unit of electric flux is the volt-meter (), or, equivalently, newton-meter squared per coulomb (). Thus, the unit of electric flux expressed in terms of SI base units is . Its dimensional formula is .
|
|