Method of images and spherical shell

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A grounded & conducting spherical shell of outer radius M and inner radius N has a point charge Q inside the shell at a distance r<M from center. Using method of images, find the potential inside the sphere.

Could I just use the superposition of charge and point charge?

\phi(r) = \frac{1}{4 \pi \epsilon _0} \left( \frac{q}{|r-r&#039;|} + \frac{q&#039;}{|r-r&#039;&#039;|} \right)
 
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You know that since the shell is a grounded conductor, \phi(M)=\phi(N)=0. You cannot achieve that with only one extra charge. You will need two extra charges; q' and q'' outside the shell (r>M).
 
Last edited:
gabbagabbahey said:
You know that since the shell is a grounded conductor, \phi(M)=\phi(N)=0. You cannot achieve that with only one extra charge. You will need two extra charges; q' and q'' outside the shell (r>M).

why this is so?

Why would this change for a conductor that was not grounded?

Why must the image charge reside outside the shell?
 
Well, the surfaces of a conductor are equipotentials; so if the conductor wasn't grounded you would have \phi (N)=\phi _N, \phi (M)=\phi _M where \phi _N and \phi _M are constants. Since the conductor is grounded these will both be zero.

In either case you need an image charge configuration that will encompass 4 things:

(1)Ensure that the potential at r=M is a constant \phi _M (zero for a grounded conductor)
(2)Ensure that the potential at r=N is a constant \phi _N (zero for a grounded conductor)
(3)Ensure that the only charge present in the region N<r<M is your actual point charge Q
(4)Ensure that there are no additional charges in the region you are calculating phi for (r<N)

(3) and (4) mean that any image charges will have too be placed at r>M. While, (1) and (2) each give you a constraint that requires an image point charge. You probably know that you can get a constant potential for a single spherical surface by placing a single image charge outside the surface; well by the superposition principle you can therefor achieve a constant potential on both surfaces by placing two charges at convenient locations.
 
Here's what I'm trying, let me know if this is okay:

Using CGS units:

\phi(\vec{r}) = \frac{q}{|\vec{r}-\vec{x}|}+ \frac{q&#039;}{|\vec{r}-\vec{y}|}+\frac{q&#039;&#039;}{|\vec{r}-\vec{z}|}

\phi(a) = \frac{q/a}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{x}{a}\hat{x} \right|}+ \frac{q&#039;/a}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{y}{a}\hat{y} \right|} +\frac{q&#039;&#039;/a}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z}{a}\hat{z} \right|}=0

\phi(b) = \frac{q/b}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{x}{b}\hat{x} \right|}+ \frac{q&#039;/b}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{y}{b}\hat{y} \right|} +\frac{q&#039;&#039;/b}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z}{b}\hat{z} \right|}=0
 
You might want to try putting all three charges on the z-axis instead (with z''>z'>b)
 
ok, I'm not sure what the best approach is to solving this. Any hints?
 
hmmm... maybe start with an easier problem; forget the second image charge for a minute; where would you have to put an image charge (and what would the charge it have to be) to make the potential on the inner surface zero? How about a constant V_1?
 
I've read over the examples in the book and they seem to do something along the lines of:


\frac{q/a}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z}{a}\hat{z} \right|} = - \frac{q&#039;/a}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z&#039;}{a}\hat{z} \right|} -\frac{q&#039;&#039;/a}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z&#039;&#039;}{a}\hat{z} \right|}

\frac{q/b}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z}{b}\hat{z} \right|} = - \frac{q&#039;/b}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z&#039;}{b}\hat{z} \right|} -\frac{q&#039;&#039;/b}{\left| \hat{r}-\frac{z&#039;&#039;}{b}\hat{z} \right|}

the problem is I can simply continue along side of the book where they would continue as such:

\frac{q}{a}=-\frac{q&#039;}{a}-\frac{q&#039;&#039;}{a}

\frac{z}{a}=\frac{z&#039;}{a}+\frac{z&#039;&#039;}{a}

and similarly for r=b

This is where I am stuck... not sure how to get the relations since the case is not as simple.
 
  • #10
gabbagabbahey said:
You know that since the shell is a grounded conductor, \phi(M)=\phi(N)=0. You cannot achieve that with only one extra charge. You will need two extra charges; q' and q'' outside the shell (r>M).

I think that only one charge is needed since the outside shell has no idea what the inside shell is doing since the conductor is grounded and there is no e-field to transmit the information from the inside shell to the outside shell
 
  • #11
Where would you put the single image charge to make \phi(M)=0? Is \phi(N) zero with that configuration?
 
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