ATOMS AS SPHERES OF CHARGE:
In Rutherford's work on particle scattering from atomic nuclei,
he regarded the atom as having a pointlike positive charge of
at its centre, surrounded by a spherical volume of radius filled
with a uniform charge density that makes up a total charge ,
making the atom as a whole electrically neutral.
In this simple model, calculate the electric field strength
and the electric potential
as functions of radius and various constants.
Plot your results for .
(Choose
.)
ANSWER: By Gauss' Law,
where
is the total charge inside the closed Gaussian surface:
if we use a sphere of radius then
.
By spherical symmetry, points radially outward
(normal to the surface) and is the same strength all over the sphere,
so Gauss' Law yields
, giving
.
At this goes to zero; for
there are equal amounts of positive and negative charge
enclosed, so Gauss' Law tells us that
.
Now to calculate the potential .
If we take the potential to be zero for ,
,
then integrating from to
(the same thing as integrating from to )
gives
The integral can be split into two parts,
Although these are not hard integrals, one can easily fall into
confusion by not thinking carefully about the limits
of integration. Since , we can combine the
two results to give
.
The two graphs have qualitatively similar behaviour -
each "blows up" as and drops to zero at -
but they really are different functions.