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 Next: The Point Source
If you go on in Physics you will learn all about  GAUSS' LAW 
along with vector calculus in your advanced course on 
 ELECTRICITY AND MAGNETISM, 
where it is used to calculate the electric field 
strength at various distances from highly symmetric distributions 
of electric charge.  However,  GAUSS' LAW can be applied 
to a huge variety of interesting situations 
having nothing to do with electricity except by analogy.  
Moreover, the rigourous statement of  GAUSS' LAW 
in the mathematical language of vector calculus 
is not the only way to express this handy concept, which is 
one of the few powerful modern mathematical tools which can be 
accurately deduced from ``common sense''
and which really follows from a statement so simple and 
obvious as to seem trivial and uninteresting, to wit: 
(Colloquial form of  GAUSS' LAW) 
 
 ``When something passes out of a region, 
it is no longer inside that region.''  
How, you may ask, can such a dumb tautology teach us 
anything we don't already know?  
The power of  GAUSS' LAW rests in its combination with 
our knowledge of geometry (e.g. the surface area  A 
 of a sphere of radius  r  is  
 )
and our instinctive 
understanding of symmetry (e.g. there is no way for 
a point of zero size to define a favoured direction ).  
When we put these two skills together with  GAUSS' LAW 
we are able to easily derive some not-so-obvious 
quantitative properties of many commonly-occurring 
natural phenomena.
)
and our instinctive 
understanding of symmetry (e.g. there is no way for 
a point of zero size to define a favoured direction ).  
When we put these two skills together with  GAUSS' LAW 
we are able to easily derive some not-so-obvious 
quantitative properties of many commonly-occurring 
natural phenomena.  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 Next: The Point Source
Jess H. Brewer 
2000-02-22