Point charge in a conducting plane

AI Thread Summary
A point charge +Q near a large conducting plane produces an electric field equivalent to that created by a point charge -Q placed in a mirror-image position behind the plane. This method, known as the method of images, simplifies solving electrostatic problems by allowing the use of mirror charges. The conducting plane must be infinite in size and cannot have a net charge, although grounding is not strictly necessary. Electric field lines are perpendicular to the conducting plane, confirming the validity of the mirror charge approach. Understanding these principles is crucial for accurately analyzing electric fields in such configurations.
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Point charge +Q is placed close to a very large conducting plane. A professor of physics asserted that the field caused by this configuration is the same as would be obtained by removing the plane and placing a point charge -Q of equal magnitude in the mirror-image position behind the initial position of the plane. Is this correct? Why or why not?
 
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It is correct. The method of placing mirror charges is an easy way to solve such problems.
Experience tells you were to put the charges.
The mathematical way to see this, is by solving the Poisson equation using the correct boundary conditions for the Green function.
 
betel said:
It is correct. The method of placing mirror charges is an easy way to solve such problems.
Experience tells you were to put the charges.
The mathematical way to see this, is by solving the Poisson equation using the correct boundary conditions for the Green function.


Does the voltage of the plane matter?
 
thedore said:
Does the voltage of the plane matter?

What do you mean by voltage? A single plane can not have a voltage, you have to specify in relation to what the voltage is considered. But you can have a charge on the plane.
 
thedore said:
Does the voltage of the plane matter?

Yes,the plane must be grounded

And the mathematical principle behind such "cheating" solution is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniqueness_theorem" .
 
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Actually you want to refer to the theory of images. The plane does not have to be grounded but it cannot have a net charge and it must be infinite in size.

The principle is simple. Electric field lines are perpendicular to a conducting plane. If you mirror the charges on two sides of an imaginary plane (reverse the sign of the charges on opposite sides of the plane) the electric field lines will be perpendicular to the imaginary plane. So mirrored charges produce the same field as charges in front of a mirror. That's how "mirroring" gets it's name.
 
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