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From Griffiths, Problem 4.1
A sphere of radius R carries a polarization
<br /> \textbf{P}=k\textbf{r}<br />
where k is constant and r is the vector from the center.
a. Calculate \sigma_b and \rho_b.
b. Find the field inside and outside the sphere.
part a is handled simply by \sigma_b=\textbf{P}\cdot\hat{n} and \rho_b=-\nabla\cdot\textbf{P}.
part b is handled most easily by using the bound charges found and gauss's law, giving: \textbf{E}=\frac{-kr}{\epsilon_0}\hat{r} and 0 outside.
part b can also be handled by first getting the potential through:\frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0}\int_v \frac{\hat{r}\cdot\textbf{P}}{r^2}d\tau. Then just get the negative gradient of V to yield E. This gives the same result as method 1 for both inside and outside (P=0 when dealing with outside case).
Now, i tried to get the field, again by computing for V but this time with:
V(r)=\frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0}\oint_s\frac{\sigma_b}{r}da + \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0}\int_v\frac{\rho_b}{r}d\tau. The answer i get using this integral is different. i would like to know if in the first place this integral is applicable? if I'm trying to get the potential inside, do i still consider the surface bound charge?
the best i managed was an answer negative to the correct one. (but this had 1 dubioius step involved). also, i could only attempt to get the potential inside. can anyone make the last method work (for both outside and inside)? or share why it doesnt?
thanks.
A sphere of radius R carries a polarization
<br /> \textbf{P}=k\textbf{r}<br />
where k is constant and r is the vector from the center.
a. Calculate \sigma_b and \rho_b.
b. Find the field inside and outside the sphere.
part a is handled simply by \sigma_b=\textbf{P}\cdot\hat{n} and \rho_b=-\nabla\cdot\textbf{P}.
part b is handled most easily by using the bound charges found and gauss's law, giving: \textbf{E}=\frac{-kr}{\epsilon_0}\hat{r} and 0 outside.
part b can also be handled by first getting the potential through:\frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0}\int_v \frac{\hat{r}\cdot\textbf{P}}{r^2}d\tau. Then just get the negative gradient of V to yield E. This gives the same result as method 1 for both inside and outside (P=0 when dealing with outside case).
Now, i tried to get the field, again by computing for V but this time with:
V(r)=\frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0}\oint_s\frac{\sigma_b}{r}da + \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0}\int_v\frac{\rho_b}{r}d\tau. The answer i get using this integral is different. i would like to know if in the first place this integral is applicable? if I'm trying to get the potential inside, do i still consider the surface bound charge?
the best i managed was an answer negative to the correct one. (but this had 1 dubioius step involved). also, i could only attempt to get the potential inside. can anyone make the last method work (for both outside and inside)? or share why it doesnt?
thanks.