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03 Charge and Field; inside and-or outside?

Aim

To show that on a conductor the charge resides on the outside and that inside a charged conductor there is no field.

Subjects

Diagram

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Figure 1:.

Equipment

Safety

So, the message is: stay careful when working with a Van de Graaff generator.

Presentation

Demo 1a

Charge is brought on the outside of the pan by means shortly touching it with the wire that is connected to the Van der Graaff generator.

The demonstrator takes one of the small conducting spheres and touches with that sphere the inside of the pan (the audience can clearly hear that the inside is touched). The sphere is then made touching the electroscope that will show no deflection. Repeating the action will have no effect on the electroscope. Then the demonstrator repeats this action, but now he touches the outside of the pan with the metal sphere. Now the electroscope shows a deflection, which increases when he repeats his action.

Demo 1b

The same demonstration is performed but now the metal pan is charged by touching the inside of the metal pan with the lead coming from the Van de Graaff generator. The result of this demo is exactly the same as in Demo 1a.

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Figure 2:.

Demo 2

The demonstrator holds the two metal spheres that are touching each other and lowers them into the pan. He takes care that the spheres do not to touch the inside of the pan. Inside the pan he separates the two spheres (see Figure 2B), lifts them out of the pan and with one of the spheres he touches the electroscope. The electroscope does not react. Also when he touches the electroscope with the other sphere nothing will happen.

He repeats the demonstration, but now he brings the two touching spheres close to the outside of the charged metal pan and there he separates the two spheres (see Figure 2A). Again he touches with one sphere the electroscope and now the electroscope shows a deflection. Next, he touches the electroscope with the other metal sphere and the deflection of the electroscope becomes less.

Explanation

The first demonstration shows clearly that charge is always on the outside of the metal pan. Theoretically this can be explained when you apply Gauss’s law (see the demonstration Charge is on the outside.

The second demonstration shows clearly that outside the pan there is an electric field that acts on the charges in the two neutral conducting spheres. These charges are separated from each other. And when, still in the field, the two spheres are separated, these charges are isolated. One sphere is positively charged now and the other negatively.

In the same way the demonstration shows that inside the metal pan there is no electric field.

Remarks

Sources

Wolfson, Richard, Essential University Physics, pag, 359-360