- #1
FrankJ777
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[My understanding is that in a conductor which is conducting a current there is and electric field present also. If the electric field can be found by E= - [tex]\frac{dV}{dl}[/tex], what is E in a conductor. On a conductor in a DC circuit the potential is the same everwhere on that conductor, so I believe - [tex]\frac{dV}{dl}[/tex] would be 0? So is the equation E= - [tex]\frac{dV}{dl}[/tex] only valid for noncunductors?
I'm only in my second month of Phys II so I'm still pretty new to this concept. If anybody can clear this up I'd really appreciate it.
I'm only in my second month of Phys II so I'm still pretty new to this concept. If anybody can clear this up I'd really appreciate it.