Isolated charged conducting sphere problem

AI Thread Summary
To solve the problem of finding the capacitance and charge density of an isolated charged conducting sphere, the electric field at a distance of 21 cm can be used to determine the charge using Gauss' Law. The formula q = 4πr²Eε₀ allows for the calculation of charge based on the electric field. The capacitance can be derived from the relationship C = q/V, where V is determined by integrating the electric field from the sphere's radius to infinity. The surface charge density is then calculated as charge divided by the surface area of the sphere. Proper application of these principles should yield the correct capacitance value, which is noted to be 13.3 pF in the reference material.
abot
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Hi, i appreciate your help.

The problem reads
an isolated charged conducting sphere with radius 12cm creates an electrical fiels of 4.90^4 21cm away from the center. find the capacitance and charge density?

I used the formula
C= (a*b)/(Ke*(b-a))
but i get the wrong answer what am i doing wrong?
 
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If the E Field is 4.9x10^4 21cm away, simplify the charged sphere to a point charge, and calculate Q if you know E using Gauss' Law.

\int{E}{dA} = \frac{q}{\epsilon_0} which simplifies to EA = \frac{q}{\epsilon_0}

Charge Density = Q / A
Whats the surface area of the sphere?

I only know how to do parallel plate capacitances.
 
abot said:
Hi, i appreciate your help.

The problem reads
an isolated charged conducting sphere with radius 12cm creates an electrical fiels of 4.90^4 21cm away from the center. find the capacitance and charge density?

I used the formula
C= (a*b)/(Ke*(b-a))
but i get the wrong answer what am i doing wrong?
The field at 21 cm radius gives you the charge:

\int E\cdot dA = 4\pi r^2E = \frac{q}{\epsilon_0}

q = 4\pi r^2E\epsilon_0

Charge density on surface is just q/A.

It may seem surprising but a charged sphere has capacitance. You can pump more charge onto the sphere and build up the voltage on the sphere (relative to ground). This is essentially how the Vandegraff generator works.

Capacitance is defined as:

C = q/V = q/\int_R^\infty E dr

From Coulomb's law:
E = \frac{q}{4\pi\epsilon_0r^2}

So from that you can work out the expression for C.

AM
 
Andrew Mason, above you say what capacitance is defined as and also tell me coulombs law. after i solve for c, capacitance i get
C= (ab)/(k(a-b))
where a and b are the radius
then when i plug the numbers in, i don't get the right answer. the book gets 13.3pF.
what am i doing wrong?
THANKS
 
C = \frac{q}{V} = \frac{q}{\int_R^\infty E dr} = \frac{q}{\int_R^\infty{\frac{q}{4\pi\epsilon_0r^2}}{dr}} = \frac{q}{\frac{-q}{4\pi\epsilon_0R}} = -4\pi\epsilon_0R

You know all the variables. Now find the capacitance.
 
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