Electrostatic Potential Energy of a Conducting Sphere

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Homework Help Overview

The discussion revolves around calculating the total electrostatic potential energy of a conducting sphere with a uniform charge distribution. The problem involves concepts from electrostatics, specifically relating to potential energy and work done in charging the sphere.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Mathematical reasoning, Problem interpretation

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants discuss the relationship between electrostatic potential energy and the work done to charge the sphere, with attempts to derive the energy using integration. Questions arise regarding the implications of changing charge representations, such as using charge density instead of total charge.

Discussion Status

The discussion is active, with participants exploring different methods of integration to find the potential energy. Some guidance has been provided regarding the integration process, and there is an ongoing inquiry into variations of the problem, such as the introduction of charge density.

Contextual Notes

Participants are navigating the implications of different charge configurations and the mathematical representations involved. There is a mention of the need to integrate from zero charge to total charge, indicating a focus on the foundational principles of electrostatics.

George3
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Homework Statement


Determine the total electrostatic potential energy of a conducting sphere of radius r_0 that carries a total charge Q distributed uniformly on its surface. Give your answer in terms of Q, r_0, epsilon_0 and appropriate constants.


Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



I know that U = QV and I know that V = kQ/r. I tried to answer it as U = (1/(4pi*epsilon_0))*Q^2/r_0 but that seems to be incorrect. Can anyone point me in the right direction?
 
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The electrostatic potential energy of the sphere is equal to the work done while it is charged.
If there is q charge on the sphere, the potential is kq/r0 on it surface. The work needed to move a charge dq from infinity to the surface of the sphere is:

<br /> <br /> dW=kq*dq/r_0

To get the whole work, you have to integrate from q=0 to q=Q.

ehild
 
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So if you integrate dW = kq *dq/r you end up getting W = k/r * the integral of q *dq from 0 to Q. Which just ends up being W = kQ^2/2r right?
 
George3 said:
So if you integrate dW = kq *dq/r you end up getting W = k/r * the integral of q *dq from 0 to Q. Which just ends up being W = kQ^2/2r right?

Yes, but with r0, the radius of the sphere.

ehild
 
i have a question similar to this. I was wondering if the question was rephrased to say that the sphere has a charge density, p, instead of a charge q how you would answer it?

Would simply become a Q/(volume of sphere) instead of q in your integral equation with everything else remaining the same?

Ps. sorry if this is not the correct format to ask a question (im new on the forum). If you guys want me to make a new thread please let me know thanks!
 

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