electric field due to a uniformly charged solid sphere using coulomb law
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Explanation:
Considering a Gaussian surface in the form of a sphere at radius r, the electric field has the same magnitude at every point of the sphere and is directed outward. The electric flux is then just the electric field times the area of the sphere. so this is seen to be consistent with Coulomb's law.
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=> I can find the electric field from a charged solid sphere using Gauss's law but I am struggling to calculate this from Coulomb's law (I have seen examples of calculating e-field using Coulomb's law for a disk, a ring, a line etc. but not a solid sphere).
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