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Ed:part
The inverse square law says it all. If you calculate E_x and E_y using
the inverse square law and then draw field lines in accordance with
dE_y/dE_x = dy/dx. The proper density of lines is guaranteed - it is
of (a corollary of?) the inverse square law. Look at the field linesof
a single point charge for a simple example where this conection is
obvious.
Bob Sciamanda
Physics, Edinboro Univ of PA (em)
trebor@velocity.net
http://www.velocity.net/~trebor
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ed Schweber" <edschweb@IX.NETCOM.COM>
To: <PHYS-L@lists.nau.edu>
Sent: Thursday, October 25, 2001 5:26 AM
Subject: Re: Electric Field Lines
Hi:proportionality
Yesterday I posed a question about the standard algorithm for
constructing electric field lines, using a dipole as a paradigm.
" What has recently begun to perplex me is that we have only paid
explicit
attention to the direction of the field and the correct
between the density of the field lines and the strength of thefield
seems
to have appeared by magic." . . .