Page:A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism - Volume 1.djvu/140

 Rh (5) At any point of an electrified surface at which the surface-density is $$\sigma$$, the first derivative of $$V$$, taken with respect to the normal to the surface, changes its value abruptly at the surface,  so that

where $$v$$ and $$v'$$ are the normals on either side of the surface, and $$V$$ and $$V'$$ are the corresponding- potentials. We shall refer to this equation as the Superficial Characteristic equation.

(6) If $$V$$ denote the potential at a point whose distance from any fixed point in a finite electrical system is $$r$$, then the product  $$Vr$$, when $$r$$ increases indefinitely, is ultimately equal to $$E$$, the total  charge in the finite system.

97.] Lemma. Let V be any continuous function of $$x, y, z,$$ and let $$u, v, w$$ be functions of $$x, y, z,$$ subject to the general solenoidal  condition

where these functions are continuous, and to the superficial solenoidal condition at any surface at which these functions become discontinuous, $$l, m, n$$ being the direction-cosines of the normal to the surface, and $$u_1,v_1,w_1$$ and $$u_2, v_2, w_2$$ the values of the functions on opposite  sides of the surface, then the triple integral vanishes when the integration is extended over a space bounded by surfaces at which either $$V$$ is constant, or

$$l, m, n,$$ being the direction-cosines of the surface.

Before proceeding to prove this theorem analytically we may observe, that if $$u, v, w$$ be taken to represent the components of the  velocity of a homogeneous incompressible fluid of density unity,  and if $$V$$ be taken to represent the potential at any point of space  of forces acting on the fluid, then the general and superficial equations of continuity ((1) and (2)) indicate that every part of the  space is, and continues to be, full of the fluid, and equation (4)  is the condition to be fulfilled at a surface through which the fluid  does not pass.

The integral $$M$$ represents the work done by the fluid against the forces acting on it in unit of time.