Find the electric field strength inside a solid sphere.

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Homework Statement


A solid sphere 25cm in radius carries 14uC, distributed uniformly throughout its volume. Find the electric field strength (a.) 15cm, (b.) 25cm, (c.) 50cm from the sphere's center.

R = .25m
Q = 14 * 10^-6 C

Homework Equations


p = q/(volume)
E = (kq)/r^2


The Attempt at a Solution


a.) I have absolutely no idea where to even begin here. This is what I really need help with. I'm not sure if the answer relates to the other two distances, so i'll show how I got those. For some reason, E = (kq)/r^2 fails here.

b.) E = (kq)/r^2 = (9.0*10^9 Nm^2/C^2)(14*10^-6 C)/(.25m)^2 = 2.02 * 10^-6 N/C

c.) E = (kq)/r^2 = (9.0*10^9 Nm^2/C^2)(14*10^-6 C)/(.50m)^2 = 504 * 10^3 N/C
 
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The field inside a uniformly charged sphere is not kq/r^2. To determine the actual relationship, the easiest way is to use Gauss's Law. Are you familiar with Gauss's law?
 
gabbagabbahey said:
The field inside a uniformly charged sphere is not kq/r^2. To determine the actual relationship, the easiest way is to use Gauss's Law. Are you familiar with Gauss's law?

Yes I am familiar with Gauss's Law.

flux = integral(EAcos(theta)) = q_enclosed/e_0.

I'm still not sure where to go from here, though.
 
What is Q_{enclosed} at r= 15cm?
 
gabbagabbahey said:
What is Q_{enclosed} at r= 15cm?

I know its not 14uC. It must be something else, but I can't seem to figure out what.

Q = (e_0)*E*A ?

A = 4(pi)r^2 = 4(pi)(.15m)^2 = .2827m^2 ?
 
Well the 14uC is distributed uniformly throughout the sphere, so what is the charge density of the sphere then?
 
I would say Q/A = 14*10^-6 C * .2827 m^2 = 5*10^-5 C/m^2

But plugging that into: E = (5*10^-5 C/m^2)/e_0 = 5.59*10^6 N/C.

But my book says E = 1.21 MN/C
 
Last edited:
Can anyone point me in the right direction here?

I still can't wrap my head around this. :(If the charge density is p = q/volume. Then p = (14*10^-6 C)/(4/3*pi*(.25m)^2 = 2.14*10^-4 C/m^3

But how do I use this?
 
Well, Q_{enclosed} is the charge enclosed by your Gaussian surface. For part (a), the Gaussian surface does not enclose the entire volume; and so it does not enclose the entire charge. What volume is enclosed for r=15cm? Shouldn't the charge enclosed be that volume times the density that you just calculated?
 
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