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WJSwanson
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Homework Statement
A spherical conductor of radius a is surrounded by a spherical conducting shell of radius b, and the gap is filled with an insulating material of resistivity ρ. A thin wire connects the inner surface of the shell to the surface of the conductive sphere, and a potential of V is applied to the outer surface of the conducting shell.
I. Determine the current drawn from the voltage source.
II. Integrate the power density (σE2) over the insulator volume v and compare to the power drawn from the voltage source.
Homework Equations
dR = ρ dr / 4πr2
i = V / R
E = ρ J = -[itex]\partial[/itex]V/[itex]\partial[/itex]r
Pdissipative = I2R
P/v = σE2
V = -∫E dot dr
The Attempt at a Solution
Part I was fairly straightforward. I found R by integrating from b to a (because the current travels inward from b) and got
R = ρ (b - a) / 4πab
which yielded
i = 4πVab / ρ(b - a)
Part II is giving me fits, however. The power drawn from the voltage source is just I*V. To get the power from the power density σE2 I would need to find an expression for E. Since E is in the same direction as the radial displacement vector r,
V = -∫E dr = -Er, evaluated over the limits of integration (from b to a, in this case).
I have a feeling that this is the route I need to take, but I'm not sure where to take it from there. I also considered using
E = ρJ = ρ(i/A)
but am also not sure where to take that... I figure I would need to find a function J(r) since the current density is r-dependent. (Current is constant over an r-dependent geometry.)
Anyone who can help me with this, or give a hint as to the right direction, would be doing me a huge favor.