1: Understanding the Charge Distribution
- The conducting shell redistributes its charge to maintain electrostatic equilibrium.
- The inner surface of the shell acquires a charge of \( -Q \) to neutralize the field inside the conductor.
- The outer surface must therefore carry a charge: \[ q_{\text{outer}} = q + Q \]
2: Surface Charge Density on Outer Surface The surface charge density \( \sigma \) is given by: \[ \sigma = \frac{\text{Charge on outer surface}}{\text{Surface area of the sphere}} \] \[ \sigma = \frac{q + Q}{4\pi R^2} \] Thus, the charge density on the outer surface is: \[ \boxed{\sigma = \frac{q + Q}{4\pi R^2}} \]
3: Potential at \( R/2 \) from the Center
- Inside a conducting shell, the potential is uniform and equal to the potential at the surface.
- The potential at the surface is given by: \[ V = \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0} \left( \frac{Q}{R} + \frac{q}{R} \right) \] \[ V = \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0} \cdot \frac{Q + q}{R} \] Since the entire region inside the shell has the same potential, the potential at \( R/2 \) is the same as at the surface: \[ \boxed{V = \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0} \cdot \frac{Q + q}{R}} \]
4: Conclusion
- Charge density on the outer surface: \( \frac{q + Q}{4\pi R^2} \)
- Potential at \( R/2 \): \( \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_0} \cdot \frac{Q + q}{R} \)
A point charge $ +q $ is placed at the origin. A second point charge $ +9q $ is placed at $ (d, 0, 0) $ in Cartesian coordinate system. The point in between them where the electric field vanishes is:
A small bob of mass 100 mg and charge +10 µC is connected to an insulating string of length 1 m. It is brought near to an infinitely long non-conducting sheet of charge density \( \sigma \) as shown in figure. If the string subtends an angle of 45° with the sheet at equilibrium, the charge density of sheet will be :
Consider two infinitely large plane parallel conducting plates as shown below. The plates are uniformly charged with a surface charge density \( +\sigma \) and \( -\sigma \). The force experienced by a point charge \( +q \) placed at the mid point between the plates will be:
The correct IUPAC name of \([ \text{Pt}(\text{NH}_3)_2\text{Cl}_2 ]^{2+} \) is: