Question #ccd75
1 Answer
Consider a Dielectric medium.
When placed in an external electric field
The process can take place in two ways.
If it is a polar Dielectric, i.e. the molecules have permanent dipole moment, then the electric field orients the dipoles in it's direction. The thermal agitation opposes this and soon an equilibrium is established so that a steady number of molecular dipoles are oriented in the direction of the field.
If however, the molecules have no net intrinsic dipole moment, the electric field acts on the electron cloud stretching it to induce dipole moments in molecules. Then a similar process of orientation of dipoles in the direction of the field takes place even though such a process is never complete because of the thermal agitation.
In either case, the material gets polarized, and the Polarization vector
Thus polarization is dipole moment
Now, from Gauss' law,
Where
Now,
But, we have an important result from Electrostatics that,
Thus, Gauss' law in the presence of a dielectric becomes,
The electric displacement is then defined as,
The displacement vector thus let's us write Gauss' law in terms of free charges only. It is only the free charges that we can control externally, the bound charges are a result of Polarization only.