Electric Potential Inside a Non-Conducting Sphere

What is the electric potential inside a 2.5-cm-diameter non-conducting sphere with a total charge of 2.5 mC distributed uniformly throughout its volume?

Calculation of Electric Potential Inside a Non-Conducting Sphere

A 2.5-cm-diameter non-conducting sphere carries a total charge of 2.5 mC distributed uniformly throughout its volume. The electric potential inside the sphere can be calculated using the formula:

V = (3/2) * (k * Q * R^2) / (R^3)

Where:

  • V is the electric potential
  • k is the Coulomb's constant (approximately 9 × 10^9 N m^2/C^2)
  • Q is the total charge
  • R is the radius of the sphere

Given:

  • Diameter of the sphere = 2.5 cm
  • Radius of the sphere (R) = 1.25 cm = 0.0125 m
  • Total charge (Q) = 2.5 mC = 2.5 × 10^-3 C

Substitute these values into the formula and calculate the electric potential:

V = (3/2) * (9 × 10^9 N m^2/C^2) * (2.5 × 10^-3 C) * (0.0125 m)^2 / (0.0125 m)^3 = 400 V

Therefore, the electric potential inside the sphere is 400 V.

← Transformer efficiency and secondary turns calculation Understanding the effect of a falling medicine ball on a rolling wagon →