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Work and Energy Work done by an external agency to move a charge : W QV b V a Work done is path independent Electrostatic force is conservative Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Work done to bring a charge from infinity to r : W QV r Potential is the work required to create the system (potential energy) per unit charge Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Energy of a Point Charge Distribution Ex: Case of assembling three point charges W1 0 q1 r1 r2 q2 rs12 q1 1 W2 q2 4 πε0 rs12 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) q1 q2 1 W3 q3 4 πε0 rs13 rs23 q3 r3 rs23 rs13 q1 r1 rs12 r2 q2 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Energy of a Point Charge Distribution Work necessary to assemble n number of point charges 1 W 8πε0 n n i 1 j 1, j i qi q j rsij 1 W qiV ri 2 i 1 n Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Energy of a Continuous Charge Distribution 1 W ρVdτ 2 ε0 W 2 ε W E V dτ VE da 2 E V dτ 0 τ ε0 W 2 s E dτ 2 all space Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) ELECTROSTATIC ENERGY 1 W qiV ri 2 i 1 n (can be +ve/-ve) ε0 W 2 E d τ 2 all space (always +ve) Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) ELECTROSTATIC ENERGY •Energy of a point charge is infinite ! •Energy is stored in the field/charge ? •Doesn’t obey superposition principle ! Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Prob. 2.32 (a) : Find the energy stored in a uniformly charged solid sphere of radius R and charge q using: 1 W ρVdτ 2 Where q 1 r2 3 2 V r 4πε0 2R R 1 3q W 4πε0 5 R 2 Ans (a): Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Prob. 2.32 (b) : Find the energy stored in a uniformly charged solid sphere of radius R and charge q using: ε0 W 2 where Ans (b): 2 E dτ all space 1 q E 4 πε0 r 2 for r R 1 qr 4 πε0 R 3 for r R 1 3 q2 W 4πε0 5 R Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) CONDUCTORS Conductor: charges free to move within the material. Electrostatic Equilibrium: there is no net motion of charge within the conductor. Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) E = 0 inside a conductor. The existence of electrostatic equilibrium is consistent only with a zero field in the conductor. When an external field is applied ? Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A conductor in an electric field: e- Electrons move upward in response to applied field. Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A conductor in an electric field: (contd.) • Electrons accumulate on top surface. E0 • Induced charges set up a field E in the interior. Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A conductor in an electric field: (contd.) Two surfaces of a conductor: sheets of charge interior : Net E E0 E ' (magnitudes ) :E E0 E ' Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A conductor in an electric field: (contd.) Field of induced charges tends to cancel off the original field E0 must move enough electrons to the surface such that, E = E0 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) In the interior of the conductor NET FIELD IS ZERO. The process is Instantaneous Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) = 0 inside a conductor. ρ ε0 E E 0 ρ0 same amount of positive and negative charges NET CHARGE DENSITY IS ZERO. Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Any net charge resides on the surface Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A conductor is an equipotential. For any two points, a and b: V a V b 0 V E R r R r Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) E is to the surface, outside a conductor. E E=0 Else, the tangential component would cause charges to move Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A justification for surface distribution of charges in a conductor : go for a configuration to minimize the potential energy Example : Solid sphere carrying charge q q2 Wσ 8πε0R 2 6 q W ρ 5 8πε0R Wσ W ρ Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Induced Charges Conductor +q Induced charges Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A cavity in a conductor +q Gaussian surface If +q is placed in the cavity, -q is induced on the surface of the cavity. Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Prob. 2.35: A metal sphere of radius R, carrying charge q is surrounded by a thick concentric metal shell. The shell carries no net charge. (a) Find the surface charge density at R, a and b Answer: a q R q σR 2 4 πR q σ a 2 b 4 πa q σb 4 πb 2 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Prob. 2.35(b): Find the potential at the centre, using infinity as the reference point. a q R b Answer: 1 q q q V 0 4πε0 b R a Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Surface charge on a conductor Recall electrostatic boundary condition: σ E above E below nˆ ε0 => Field outside a conductor: σ E nˆ ε0 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) The surface charge density : σ ε0 E nˆ OR σ ε0 V n Knowledge of E or V just outside the conductor Surface charge on a conductor Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Force on a conductor Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Forces on charge distributions Force on a charge element dq placed in an external field E(e) : e F dq E dq E On a volume charge distribution : F ρ E dτ τ Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Prob. 2.43: Find the net force that the southern hemisphere of a uniformly charged sphere exerts on the northern hemisphere. Z R X r Q Ans: Y F 2 1 3Q ˆ k 2 4πε0 16R Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Forces on charge distributions Force on a charge element dq placed in an external field E(e) : e F dq E dq E On a volume charge distribution : F ρ E dτ τ On a surface charge distribution : F σ E da s Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Forces on surface charge distributions “ E is discontinuous across the distribution ” dq o Ea Ea E below n̂ da above dq o Eb Eb E 1 The force per unit area : f σ E above E below 2 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Force on a conductor Force (per unit area) on the conductor surface: 1 2 f σ nˆ 2 ε0 Outward Pressure on the conductor surface : 1 2 P ε0 E 2 The direction of the force is “outward” or “into the field”….. whether is positive or negative Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Prob. 2.38: A metal sphere of radius R carries a total charge Q. What is the force of repulsion between the northern hemisphere and the southern hemisphere? Z Ans: R Y X F 2 1 Q ˆ k 2 4πε0 8R Q Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) CAPACITORS Potential difference between two conductors carrying +Q and –Q charge: V V V E dl E dl E Q V Q Q C V Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Capacitance : • Is a geometrical property • Units: Farad (= coulomb/volt) Different possible geometries: • Planer • Spherical • Cylindrical Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Plates are very large and very close ε0 A C d Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A Spherical capacitor Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Cross section of a spherical capacitor ab C 4πε0 ba Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) A cylindrical capacitor L Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Cross section of a cylindrical capacitor Prob 2.39 : Capacitance per unit length of a cylindrical capacitor 1 C 2πε0 lnb a Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani) Work done to charge a capacitor At any instant, q V C 2 q 1Q dW dq W C 2 C 1 2 W CV 2 Dr. Champak B. Das (BITS, Pilani)