I like your diagrams showing the Physics of the situation. That is the hardest part of E&M problems: understanding what should happen based on physical principles makes the math so much easier. Most practical problems quickly grow into very difficult boundary-value problems; you rather stuck if you can't make some simplifying assumptions or approximations first.
I like your diagrams showing the Physics of the situation.
That is the hardest part of E&M problems: understanding what should happen based on physical principles makes the math so much easier. Most practical problems quickly grow into very difficult boundary-value problems; you rather stuck if you can't make some simplifying assumptions or approximations first.