Why is the electric field inside of a conducting sphere zero?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of a solid conducting sphere with a charge on it and a concentric conducting spherical shell with a different charge. The question is raised about why there is no electric field inside the Gaussian surface within the shell, and the answer is explained in terms of Gauss's law and the fact that the charges are static on the inner and outer surfaces of the shell. It is also noted that the field on the inside of a conductor does not matter in Gauss's law, only the enclosed charge.
  • #1
Lamebert
39
1

Homework Statement


Consider a solid conducting sphere with a radius a and charge Q1 on it. There is a conducting spherical shell concentric to the sphere. The shell has an inner radius b > a, outer radius c and a net charge Q2 on the shell. Denote the charge on the inner surface of the shell by Q′2 and that on the outer surface of the shell by Q′′2.



The Attempt at a Solution



I know the answer: you create a Gaussian surface within the outer conductor shell and somehow the electric field inside of it is zero. I'm trying to figure out why... is a charge supposed to collect on the inner surface that cancels out the charge on the inner sphere? How is that possible if the outer shell already has a charge on it? In order for the inner sphere to be canceled ( a charge of Q), the charge on the inner surface of the shell would have to be -Q, so does the negative charge basically induce a dipole on the outer shell?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
No, it's just a simple case of all of the charge building up on the surface, and the inside remains neutral. My teacher always explains it like this: if there was an electric field inside of the conductor, then the field would move charges around. Since the charges aren't moving when the conductor is at equilibrium, then there must be no electric field inside the conductor.
 
  • #3
Then what prevents the charges from moving across the conductor? If there was really no force (i.e. no electric field) then entropy would favor the spread of these electrons across all atoms, not only those on the outside. There has to be some preventative force keeping these electrons on the surface, away from the central negative charge.
 
  • #4
Sorry, slightly misread your question. I was talking about why the charges are on the surface of a sphere. In general, the field inside of a conductor is zero if the charges aren't moving. In the case above, the charges are static on the inner and outer surfaces of the shell, so there's no field inside of the conductor. It's true that the charge on the sphere induces the shell, but there's still no field inside of it.
 
  • #5
My question isn't why there is no field inside the conductor. It's why there is no field inside the Gaussian surface, where the outside exists inside the outer conductor shell: why does the inside of the shell surface match the charge on the outside of the sphere, effectively cancelling the electric field? My question is one of fundamentals.
 
  • #6
Careful with the wording. Gauss's law involves flux of an electric field through the surface, so the field on the inside doesn't matter -- only the enclosed charge. In your example, the Gaussian surface (I'm assuming it's a sphere) is entirely encased inside of the shell, inside of which (i.e. the shell) there is no field. Since field is zero, flux through the surface is also zero.

EDIT: My wording was a little poor with this line "the Gaussian surface (I'm assuming it's a sphere) is entirely encased inside of the shell." What I mean is that the radius of the sphere lies between the inside and outside radii of the shell such that the surface of the sphere lies within the shell.
 

Related to Why is the electric field inside of a conducting sphere zero?

1. Why is the electric field inside of a conducting sphere zero?

The electric field inside of a conducting sphere is zero because of the principle of electrostatic shielding. Conductors have free electrons that can easily move within the material. When an external electric field is applied, these free electrons will redistribute themselves to cancel out the field inside the conductor. This results in a net electric field of zero inside the conducting sphere.

2. How does the shape of the conducting sphere affect the electric field inside?

The shape of the conducting sphere does not affect the electric field inside as long as the sphere is fully enclosing the charge. This is because the principle of electrostatic shielding applies to all points inside the conductor, regardless of its shape. As long as the charge is fully enclosed, the electric field inside will be zero.

3. Does the electric field inside of a conducting sphere depend on the amount of charge placed on its surface?

No, the electric field inside of a conducting sphere does not depend on the amount of charge placed on its surface. As long as the charge is fully enclosed within the sphere, the electric field inside will be zero due to the principle of electrostatic shielding.

4. Can the electric field inside a conducting sphere ever be non-zero?

In most cases, the electric field inside a conducting sphere will be zero. However, if the conducting sphere has a cavity or opening, the electric field inside may not be zero. This is because the free electrons will not be able to fully redistribute themselves to cancel out the field in these regions.

5. What happens to the electric field inside a conducting sphere when an external charge is brought near it?

The electric field inside a conducting sphere will remain zero, regardless of the presence of an external charge. This is because the principle of electrostatic shielding still applies, and the free electrons will redistribute to cancel out the external field. However, the electric field on the surface of the conducting sphere may change depending on the location and magnitude of the external charge.

Similar threads

  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
23
Views
597
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
11
Views
506
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
3
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
10
Views
821
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
9
Views
2K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
4
Views
563
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
13
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
9
Views
321
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
17
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
11
Views
252
Back
Top