Point charge at the center of a spherical conductor

In summary, the charge on the surface of the outer shell is positive to cancel the negative charge of the inner shell.
  • #1
snoweangel27
17
0
I have the problem

A positive point charge of magnitude 2.4 micro Coulombs is at the center of an uncharged spherical conducting shell of inner radius 65 cm and outer radius 85 cm.

I have been trying to calculate the total charge for the inner sphere. I solved for the Electric Field by using E=kq/r^2, then using Coulombs law to obtain Q in micro Coulombs, but I end up with a wrong answer. Could someone please explain what I am doing wrong.
 
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  • #2
Not exactly sure what you did. Why not use Gauss's law?
 
  • #3
Sorry, I feel really dumb, I was forgetting that the Total Charge on the smaller sphere would be negative. It's always nice to find out when you've wasted an hour trying to figure out what was wrong and it was just missing a negative sign
 
  • #4
i am doing this problem now. i am just learning gauss's law and am very confused.

i did end up getting the problem right, but i do not understand how you know whether or not it will be positive or negative. can someone help?
 
  • #5
The whole thing's uncharged (according to the problem) and there's a positive charge in the middle. Of course the shell has to be negative.
 
  • #6
i'm sorry.. i'll reiterate, i really don't understand physics very much, even though i honestly do try. i took physics 1 in high school my junior year and somehow passed the AP test. I'm now in college physics 2, we just started electricity a week ago. i'll admit that i don't understand the basic concepts at all, but i really don't feel like the teacher explains anything much. I'm just trying my best to follow formulas and get by. could someone please explain a bit why the inner one must be negative but the outer one is positive? (i needed to find the densities & electric fields for both the inner and outer surfaces)
 
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  • #7
Oh, I see the problem: you misunderstood the question. The question talks about a shell of finite thickness (like a soccer ball, except with a thicker shell). There's a small, positive object inside the shell, but the system (small object + shell) is neutral. So the shell must be negative to cancel out the positive charge of the small object.
 
  • #8
what about the charge on the surface of the outer shell? is that positive to cancel the negative of the... inner shell? I'm sorry to be a pain.
 
  • #9
No, the outer skin of the shell is neutral. You can prove this using Gauss' law. Take a Gaussian surface surrounding the inner skin of the shell. The total electric flux through that surface will be 0, since the surface is totally inside a conductor. That means the enclosed charge must be 0. The rest of the shell must be neutral, or else the system won't be neutral.
 
  • #10
ideasrule said:
Oh, I see the problem: you misunderstood the question. The question talks about a shell of finite thickness (like a soccer ball, except with a thicker shell). There's a small, positive object inside the shell, but the system (small object + shell) is neutral. So the shell must be negative to cancel out the positive charge of the small object.

I'm also having problems to understand the question. So it's like the surface of a soccer ball, but with an object in the middle. Then what does the inner and outer radius represent? It's 20 cm thin. Does that mean that the conductor fills within both radii?

By the way, what is the question? Calculate the total charge of the shell? But as you said, the charge of the small object+shell=0 and we know the charge of the small object... hence there's almost nothing to do.

I'm completely misunderstanding the problem/situation.
 
  • #11
A positive point charge of magnitude 1.6 µC is at the center of an uncharged spherical conducting shell of inner radius 65 cm and outer radius 110 cm.

(a) Find the charge densities on the inner and outer surfaces of the shell.
inner -.301358 µC/m2
outer .10522 µC/m2
Find the total charge on each surface.
inner -1.6 µC
outer 1.6 µC

maybe my question is slightly different? i think it's the same though. these answers are correct, it's online homework and it tells you if you're right or wrong.
what I'm getting confused about is where to put negative signs.
to solve the problem, i used Qenclosed = charge density * A
 
  • #12
fluidistic said:
I'm also having problems to understand the question. So it's like the surface of a soccer ball, but with an object in the middle. Then what does the inner and outer radius represent? It's 20 cm thin. Does that mean that the conductor fills within both radii?

That's the way I interpreted it, but it is ambiguous.

By the way, what is the question? Calculate the total charge of the shell? But as you said, the charge of the small object+shell=0 and we know the charge of the small object... hence there's almost nothing to do.

The question was to calculate the charge of the "inner sphere". I interpreted that to mean the inner surface of the shell, but again, the question's ambiguous.
 
  • #13
Ok thanks ideasrule.
Edit: So it's like a 3 dimensional hollow sphere. In its center there's a small charge. So if we set the place where the charge is as to be the origin, in order to reach the surface of the sphere I would have to pass through 65 cm of vacuum and then 20 cm of metal (conductor). Am I right?
And they ask what is the charge over the inner surface of the sphere. Wow, I've no idea how to do this. I don't really see how Gauss can help me. Ok so the total charge is 0. Hence the whole sphere (without the charge in its middle) must have a charge of [tex]-1.16 \mu C[/tex]. I don't really know how to find the charge distribution.
 
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  • #14
fluidistic said:
Ok thanks ideasrule.
Edit: So it's like a 3 dimensional hollow sphere. In its center there's a small charge. So if we set the place where the charge is as to be the origin, in order to reach the surface of the sphere I would have to pass through 65 cm of vacuum and then 20 cm of metal (conductor). Am I right?

I don't know, but that's how I interpreted the question.
And they ask what is the charge over the inner surface of the sphere. Wow, I've no idea how to do this. I don't really see how Gauss can help me. Ok so the total charge is 0. Hence the whole sphere (without the charge in its middle) must have a charge of [tex]-1.16 \mu C[/tex]. I don't really know how to find the charge distribution.

I talked about how to find it in post 9.
 
  • #15
ll1111 said:
A positive point charge of magnitude 1.6 µC is at the center of an uncharged spherical conducting shell of inner radius 65 cm and outer radius 110 cm.

(a) Find the charge densities on the inner and outer surfaces of the shell.
inner -.301358 µC/m2
outer .10522 µC/m2
Find the total charge on each surface.
inner -1.6 µC
outer 1.6 µC

maybe my question is slightly different? i think it's the same though. these answers are correct, it's online homework and it tells you if you're right or wrong.
what I'm getting confused about is where to put negative signs.
to solve the problem, i used Qenclosed = charge density * A

Your solution is correct.

As for the signs: Remember, the charges can move freely in a conductor. There is a positive charge in the middle of a metal shell: it attracts the electrons of the metal, and they go as close to the positive charge as they can, but they can not leave the metal. So the electrons accumulate at the inner surface, making it negative.
Meanwhile the bulk of the metal shell becomes positive for a very short time: some electrons migrated to the inner surface and left the positive metal ions behind. These positive charges attract electrons from the region further away from the centre and at the end the bulk of the metal becomes neutral, leaving the outer surface positively charged.

ehild
 
  • #16
fluidistic said:
So it's like a 3 dimensional hollow sphere. In its center there's a small charge. So if we set the place where the charge is as to be the origin, in order to reach the surface of the sphere I would have to pass through 65 cm of vacuum and then 20 cm of metal (conductor). Am I right?
And they ask what is the charge over the inner surface of the sphere. Wow, I've no idea how to do this. I don't really see how Gauss can help me. Ok so the total charge is 0. Hence the whole sphere (without the charge in its middle) must have a charge of [tex]-1.16 \mu C[/tex]. I don't really know how to find the charge distribution.

In the original question, the metal shell was neutral.

"A positive point charge of magnitude 2.4 micro Coulombs is at the center of an uncharged spherical conducting shell of inner radius 65 cm and outer radius 85 cm."

The geometry has spherical symmetry, so Gauss Law is easy to apply. The electric field lines are radial and the electric field intensity depends only on r, distance from the centre.
Inside the empty sphere, from r=0 to r=Rin, a sphere of radius r encloses the charge at the centre. So the surface integral of E for the sphere is


[tex] E*4r^2\pi=\frac{Q}{\epsilon_0}\rightarrow E=\frac{Q}{4\pi\epsilon_0 r^2}[/tex]

The electric field lines always start out at positive charges and end at negative ones, except those lines which go to infinity. There are Q/epsilon0 field lines emerging from the central charge. The same number of field lines hit the surface of the inner sphere: so there must be -Q charge there. This means -Q/(4piRin2 surface charge density. But it is true for any charge Q that Q/epsilon0 field lines emerge from it or end in it. The electric field at the surface of the inner sphere is

[tex] E=\frac{Q}{4\pi\epsilon_0 R_in^2}[/tex].

There are no field lines inside the metal. All the field lines ending in a surface charge come from the empty sphere. So the electric field at the inner surface corresponds to surface charge density of magnitude

[tex] \sigma=E*\epsilon_0= \frac{Q}{4\pi R_{in}^2}[/tex]

For Rin<r<Rout, the enclosed charge is 0, and so is the electric field inside the metal shell.

Outside the shell and on the outer surface, the enclosed charge is Q as the shell itself is neutral. The electric field is

[tex] E=\frac{Q}{4\pi\epsilon_0 r^2}[/tex]

and the corresponding surface charge density is

[tex] \sigma=E*\epsilon_0= \frac{Q}{4\pi R_{out}^2}[/tex] .

If the total arrangement is neutral (it is so when the metal shell is grounded) the field in the empty sphere is the same as before, the surface charge density at the inner surface of the shell is the same again, but the field outside the shell is zero, as the enclosed charge is zero.

ehild
 
  • #17
Thanks to both. I've understood.
 
  • #18
edit - nevermind i think i misread the question.
 

1. What is a point charge at the center of a spherical conductor?

A point charge at the center of a spherical conductor refers to a hypothetical situation where a single positive or negative charge is placed at the exact center of a spherical conductor. This creates a symmetrical electric field around the charge, with the conductor acting as a shield.

2. How is the electric field affected by a point charge at the center of a spherical conductor?

The electric field inside the conductor is zero, as the charge is evenly distributed on the surface. However, outside the conductor, the electric field follows the inverse square law and decreases as the distance from the charge increases.

3. What is the potential difference between the center of the spherical conductor and its surface?

In a perfect conductor, the potential difference between the center and the surface is zero. This is because the electric field inside the conductor is zero, so no work is required to move a charge from the center to the surface.

4. How does the size of the spherical conductor affect the electric field of a point charge at its center?

The size of the conductor does not affect the electric field of a point charge at its center. As long as the conductor is spherical and the charge is placed at the exact center, the electric field will be symmetrical and follow the inverse square law.

5. Can a point charge at the center of a spherical conductor be moved without affecting the electric field?

No, moving the charge from the center of the conductor will disrupt the symmetry and change the electric field. However, if the charge is moved along the central axis of the sphere, the electric field will remain unchanged as long as the distance from the center is the same.

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