Gaussian statics law
On Fri, 09 Mar 2007 16:45:31 GMT, Dave
wrote:
Gauss' Law is for static electric charges and fields.
It is usually used for problems in electrostatics, but it is not
confined to such problems. The differential form of it is just one of
the Maxwell equations:
div E(x,t) = 4\pi\rho(x,t)
Integrate it over a fixed surface and you get the integral form, which
is Gauss's law. It is valid with time-dependent charge densities and
time-dependent electric fields.
--John
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