Potential Inside a Hollow Conduction Sphere

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of electric potential and its mathematical representation. It also presents a question about the potential of a hollow conducting sphere with a uniform charge distribution. The potential is shown to be a constant value of a\sigma / \epsilon0 at any point inside the sphere, and this can be derived by direct integration or using the theorem of hollow spheres. The potential is described as the potential energy per unit charge and is measured in volts.
  • #1
Cheetox
23
0
Here is a question I have been pondering on for a while and got rather stuck, could anyone help out?

'A charge is diestributed uniformley with density [tex]\sigma[/tex] over the surface of a hollow conducting sphere of radius a. Show by direct integration that the potential at any point inside it is a[tex]\sigma[/tex] / [tex]\epsilon[/tex]0 and that this is the potential of the sphere itself'

plus could anyone give me a really good defintion (mathmatcially and in words) for potential, I havn't really grasped it,

many thanks
 
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  • #2
The electric potential is a quantity that represents potential energy per unit charge. It is measured in volts, which are the same as joules per coulomb.

So basically, if the potential difference between points A and B is V, then a charge of magnitude Q, resting at A, has a potential energy of QV to travel from A to B.

Mathematically, the potential of a point charge at [itex]\vec x_0[/itex] is given by

[tex]\phi(\vec x) = \frac{1}{4 \pi \epsilon_0} \, \frac{q}{|\vec x - \vec x_0|} + C[/tex]

where C is an arbitrary constant, usually set to zero.
 
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  • #3
It's a well-known theorem of hollow spheres that the electric field strength on a charge anywhere inside the sphere is 0. Integrating 0 gives a constant, and that is why the potential is constant.

Ie the potential is whatever you set it to.

Teacher probably wants you to assume potential at infinity to be 0, so that the potential at the surface works out to:

V = - 1/4πε Q/r (relative to infinity)

Q is the total charge, ie

Q = σ * surface area = σ 4πr^2

So the potential at any point inside, is the same as the potential at the surface ie

V = - σr/ε

If you don't want to use the theorem of hollow spheres (applies to gravity to), you have to integrate Ben's formula over the entire surface, ie cut the sphere up in infinitesimal charges dq.

And the integral is not trivial.
 
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1. What is the potential inside a hollow conduction sphere?

The potential inside a hollow conduction sphere is constant and equal to the potential on the surface of the sphere. This is due to the fact that the electric field inside a conductor is always zero, and thus the potential does not change.

2. How is the potential inside a hollow conduction sphere affected by the charge distribution inside?

The potential inside a hollow conduction sphere is not affected by the charge distribution inside, as long as the surface charge density remains constant. This is because the electric field inside a conductor is always zero, regardless of the charge distribution.

3. What is the relation between the potential inside a hollow conduction sphere and the radius of the sphere?

The potential inside a hollow conduction sphere is directly proportional to the radius of the sphere. This means that the potential will increase as the radius increases, and decrease as the radius decreases.

4. Can the potential inside a hollow conduction sphere be negative?

No, the potential inside a hollow conduction sphere cannot be negative. This is because the potential is defined as the work done per unit charge to bring a test charge from infinity to a point inside the sphere. Since the electric field inside a conductor is zero, no work is required and thus the potential is zero.

5. How is the potential inside a hollow conduction sphere affected by an external electric field?

The potential inside a hollow conduction sphere is not affected by an external electric field. This is because the charges on the surface of the sphere will rearrange in a way that cancels out the effects of the external field, resulting in a constant potential inside the sphere.

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