You are right, I made a mess with the 4π and ε0. It was very hot here... And you do not need really what I wanted to explain about electric field lines and surface charges, but it is useful to imagine the problems, so I write it again -hopefully without errors. If you are not interested, go to **
The electric field of a point charge is
E=Q/(4πε0r2). According to Gauss' Law, the surface integral of E around a sphere enclosing the charge is Q/ε0.
When representing the electric field by the field lines, we take that the electric field strength is equal to the number of field lines crossing a unit surface, normal to the field, so the number of electric field lines crossing a total sphere around the point charge is Q/ε0. That is why it is said that Q/ε0 field lines emerge from a charge Q. The field lines originate at the positive charges and end at the negative ones (unless they go to infinity).
When the charges are distributed on a metal surface we know that the electric field is zero in the metal. So all the field lines go outward from the metal if the surface charge is positive, and inward if it is negative. The potential of a metal surface is the same at any point: it is an equipotential surface. The electric field is the negative gradient of the potential, its direction is normal to the equipotential surface.
We said that Q/ε0 electric field lines emerge from a charge Q. A unit surface of the metal has ρs (surface) charge, which means ρs/ε0 field lines per unit area. That is, the electric field strength is ρs/ε0 at the metal surface.
The surface charge density on the inner cylinder (with radius a) multiplied by the area of the cylindrical surface of unit length gives the line charge density, λ. It is the same for both cylinders, but the surface charge densities are different, as the outer surface is larger than the inner one.
λ=2πaρs, that is, ρs=λ/(2πa), and the electric field at the inner cylinder surface is E=λ/(2πaε0).
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The problem asks the current when the potential difference between the cylinders is given. The potential difference is obtained by integrating the electric field intensity between r1=a and r2=b.
The electric field at a point r from the centre of the inner cylinder can be obtained by Gauss Law: E 2rπ L = Q/ε0 where Q=λL is the total charge of the cylinder of length L and λ is the line charge density. So E=λ/(2πε0r). There is r in the denominator in this case, instead of r^2 valid for spherical symmetry.
The line charge density λ is obtained then from the potential difference. The electric field at the surface of the inner cylinder is obtained from the line charge density. The current is obtained from the conductivity σ and the electric field strength i=σE. The total current is equal to the current density multiplied by the area of the inner cylinder.
ehild