Electric Potential: Griffith's EM Problem 3.26 Solution

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SUMMARY

The discussion focuses on solving Griffith's Electromagnetism Problem 3.26, which involves calculating the electric potential of a sphere with a specific charge density using multipole expansion. The charge density is defined as ρ(r, θ) = k(R/r²)(R - 2r)sin(θ). The potential is approximated using the formula V(𝑟) = (1/2πϵ₀) Σ (1/rⁿ⁺¹) ∫ (r')ⁿ Pₙ(cos(θ')) ρ(r') dτ', leading to the identification of significant terms: the dipole term (n=2) and the quadrupole term (n=4). The dipole term dominates, and the quadrupole term is negligible for points far from the sphere.

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  • Understanding of multipole expansion in electrostatics
  • Familiarity with spherical coordinates and integrals
  • Knowledge of Laplace's equation in electrostatics
  • Proficiency in calculus, particularly integration techniques
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  • Study the derivation and applications of multipole expansion in electrostatics
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Griffith's EM Problem 3.26
A sphere of radius R centered at the origin carries a cahrge density
[tex]\rho(r,\theta) = k \frac{R}{r^2} (R - 2r) \sin \theta[/tex]

where k is constant and r and theta are the usual spherical coordinates. Find the approximate potentail for the points on the z axis, far from the sphere

i know ican do this with Laplace's equation but i wnana do it with the multipole expansion formula

[tex]V(\vec r) = \frac{1}{2 \pi \epsilon_{0}} \sum_{n=0}^{\infty} \frac{1}{r^{n+1}} \int (r')^n P_{n} (\cos \theta') \rho (r') d\tau'[/tex]

so about taht integral

[tex]kR \int_{0}^{R} (r')^n \frac{R-2r'}{r'^2} r'^2 dr' \int_{0}^{2\pi} P_{n} (\cos \theta) \sin^2 \theta d\theta \int_{0}^{\pi} \phi[/tex]

after some integration i found that the integral with respect to theta for
n =2 is -pi/8 dipole term
n = 4 = -pi/64 quadropole term

for n = 1, 3, and 5 is zero
so we end up with
[tex]\pi kR \frac{1 \pi}{8} \int_{0}^{R} (r')^n \frac{R-2r'}{r^2} r^2 dr[/tex]

[tex]\pi kR \frac{1 \pi}{8} \left[ \frac{-R(R)^{n+1}}{n+1} + \frac{2 R^{n+2}}{n+2} \right][/tex]

now looking at hte sum intself

we consider only n = 2 since others are too small
[tex]\frac{-1 \pi^2}{8} \frac{KR^{n+3}}{r^{n+1}} \left( \frac{1}{n+1} - \frac{2}{n+2} \right)[/tex]

[tex]\frac{kR^5}{r^3} \pi^2 \frac{1}{48}[/tex]

is this fine?

should the answer include both dipole and quadropole terms?? Since this a sphere it makes sense to have that.
thank you for your help!
 
Last edited:
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It did ask for an approximation, and the quadrapole term is way smaller than the dipole at large z, so I would leave it.

(I did not check your calculations. I assume you did it OK)
 
Your integration limits for [tex]\phi[/tex] and [tex]\theta[/tex] should be switched.
 

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