Gauss's Law of Magnetism shows us that the divergence of Magnetic field is 0, &#x25BD;<!-- ▽ -->

hard12bb30crg

hard12bb30crg

Answered question

2022-05-13

Gauss's Law of Magnetism shows us that the divergence of Magnetic field is 0, B = 0
Then how do you derive that statement by showing the divergence of a magnetic field upon an axis of a current carrying coil where radius is much smaller that distance so that we can use,
B z = μ o I 2 z 3 z ^

B z u o I 2 z 3 z ^ 0
This doesn't equal zero? What am I missing?

Answer & Explanation

Darion Sexton

Darion Sexton

Beginner2022-05-14Added 14 answers

When you compute the divergence, it's not enough to know the field at a given point or on an axis. As you need to compute all possible directional derivatives, you need to know the field in a neighbour of the point where you are calculating the divergence*. In your case, you only know the field on the axis, so no derivatives on the orthogonal plane. Your formula for divergence only have z B z : surely the other components (that you are not able to calculate) will take care of bringing the divergence to zero.
*Actually, you just need to be able to perform some derivatives: in Cartesian coordinates, you need to know B x in a 1D neighbour of the point along the x^ axis, and analogously for B y and B z substituting the versor appropriately.

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