rbrayana123 said:
I found this thread rather helpful in addressing a similar difficulty I had. Can someone verify I understand this problem:
Given a system of two concentric spherical shells, these are the areas I can divide it into:
1) Outside both shells.
2) The outer layer of the outer shell
3) The inner layer of the outer shell (or equivalently, the thickness below the outer layer if thinking microscopically)
4) The void between the shells.
5) The outer layer of the inner shell
6) The inner layer of the inner shell
7) The area below the inner layer of the inner shell.
There exists a point charge Q at 1.5R.
So, this is what happens:
1) For r > 2R, the electric field behaves as a point charge Q at the center. This is because the electric field from the point charge, even though its spherically asymmetric, is canceled out by the inner surface of the outer layer. Therefore, the Gaussian surface I construct has to only worry about the surface charge and my E dot dA integral reduces to a constant.
2) The outer surface of outer layer has a charge Q distributed over it, spherically symmetric.
Yes. There is a surface charge Q on the outer surface of the big shell. These charges do not feel other electric force but that from each other, so distribute themselves symmetrically. As the surface charge is constant on the sphere, the electric field is spherically symmetric, independent on the angles. Your Gaussian integral for a concentric sphere and radius r >2R reduces to 4πr
2E=Q/ε
0.
rbrayana123 said:
3) ...because the inner surface of the outer layer has charge -Q distributed so as to cancel out the electric field lines (within the conductor itself) from point charge at 1.5R as this is the behavior of any conductor.
In the problem, the shells are connected with a wire. Both shells are at the same potential. There are negative surface charges induced also on the outer surface of the inner shell, and the sum of the induced charges on both surfaces is equal to Q(in)+Q(out)= -Q.
If the shells are insulated I think, there would be -Q charge induced on the inner surface of the outer shell and no induced charge on the inner shell.
rbrayana123 said:
4) In the void, I'm not sure exactly what's happening because the point charge isn't exactly spherically symmetric but I know there's some sort of electric field. In fact, if I were to just consider equipotential surfaces for the point charge without the influence of anything else, there are some surfaces that actually intersect the outside conductor at some points but don't at others. Seems really weird but is my interpretation correct?
If there is a single point charge without anything else the equipotential surfaces are spherical and concentric with the point charge. But the point charge is between two equipotential surfaces, as a metal surface is always equipotential. In the problem, both surfaces are at the same potential. The field lines are normal to the equipotential surfaces, so they are normal to the surfaces of both shells very near to them. The electric field lines emerge from charges and end in charges. So the electric field in the cavity at a point P of the surface is σ(P)/ε
0, where σ is the surface charge density at that point.
rbrayana123 said:
5) So at this point... does the outer surface of the inner shell also have a charge of -Q distributed over it to cancel out the electric field lines such that the conductor's thickness has an electric field of zero (and the inner surface gains charge +Q)? It seems strange that there is -Q distributed in two places to cancel out the electric field from the point charge.
No, the surface charges on both shells on the inner surface of the cavity add up to give -Q. As the shells are connected, there can be a negative net charge on the inner shell -q=Qin, and q net charge on the outer shell, so Qout=-Q+q, so the the surface charge on the outer surface of the outer shell is q-Qout=Q.
rbrayana123 said:
6) Applying Gauss law now on the inside, the Electric field is zero.
That is true. No concentric spherical surface has any charge in the void inside the inner shell.
rbrayana123 said:
However, I'm slightly confused as to the case in which the a cavity DOES have an electric field of zero. So electrostatic shielding only applies when:
1) There are no point charges in conductor cavities
2) Your within the conductor itself when point charges are present in cavities.
Also, given the spherical asymmetric of the point charge, why can I assume the charge Q is distributed uniformly? Again, is this because the electric field is canceled out by the inner surface so the outer surface uniformly distributes itself?
Electric shielding applies against outer electric fields: If you place charges outside the shells at r>2R the electric field would not change in the void.
You get the electric field by solving Laplace equation and appliying the boundary conditions. But sometimes you can calculate it by assuming charged surfaces substituting metal plates/shells. Do not forget that the electric field lines can not cross really the metal layer. The electrons on the outer surface do not feel the inner charge.
ehild