- #1
stunner5000pt
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Homework Statement
Find the electric field of a uniformly polarized sphere of radius R
Homework Equations
[tex]V(\vec{r}) = \frac{1}{4 \pi\epsilon_{0}} \oint_{S} \frac{\sigma_{b}}{r} da' + \int_{V} \frac{\rho_{b}}{r} d\tau' [/tex]
The Attempt at a Solution
well obviously there is no volume charge density rho
but there is a surface charge density
[itex]\sigma_{b} = P \cos\theta[/itex]
now to calculate the potentail we got to use that above formula
Suppose r > R
then
[tex]
V(\vec{r}) = \frac{1}{4 \pi\epsilon_{0}} \int \frac{P \cos\theta}{r'} da'[/tex]
now the squigly r is found using the cosine law right...?
[itex]r' = \sqrt{R^2 + r^2 - 2Rr\cos\theta'} [/itex]
and
[itex]da' = R^2 \sin\theta' d\theta d\phi [/itex]
So then
[tex]V(\vec{r}) = \frac{1}{4 \pi\epsilon_{0}} \int_{0}^{2\pi}\int_{0}^{\pi} \frac{P \cos\theta}{\sqrt{R^2 + r^2 - 2Rr\cos\theta'}} \cos\theta' R^2 \sin\theta' d\theta' d\phi [/tex]
cos theta prime because we care about the Z components only
is that right?
and the limits of integrate for the theta would be from 0 to pi
and for the phi is 0 to 2pi??
thanks for your help
(o by the way how do i put the squigly r??)
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