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A Van de Graaff generator causes a total charge q to build up on a metal sphere of radius r. Which variable does not affect the electric field at a distance R from the center of the metal sphere? Assume R>r.

the distance R from the center of the metal sphere
the magnitude of the charge q
the radius r of the metal sphere
the sign of the charge q

1 Answer

4 votes

Answer:

The radius r of the metal sphere.

Step-by-step explanation:

From Gauss's law we know that for a spherical charge distribution with charge
Q, the electrical field at distance
R from the center of the sphere is given by


E=(Q)/(4\pi \epsilon_oR^2)

What is important to notice here is that the radius of the sphere does not matter because any test charge sitting at distance
R feels the force as if all the charge
Q were sitting at the center of the sphere.

This situation is analogous to the gravitational field. When calculating gravitational force due to a body like the sun or the earth, we take not of only the mass of the sun and the distance from it's center; the sun's radius does not matter because we assume all of its mass to be concentrated at the center.

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