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Lecture 3 Notes, Electromagnetic Theory I: 1. Method of Images
Lecture 3 Notes, Electromagnetic Theory I: 1. Method of Images
Lecture 3 Notes, Electromagnetic Theory I: 1. Method of Images
1. Method of Images
- Use the method of images when one or more point charges are in the presence of boundary
surfaces with constant potentials across them.
- The method of images is very important because it can be used to find the Green function and
then the Green function solution can be applied when the potential is not constant across the
boundary.
- Replace the boundary surfaces with image charges external to the region of interest in
locations recommended by symmetries.
- Make adjustable parameters out of the unknowns such as the image charge magnitude and
location.
- Vary the adjustable parameters until the boundary condition at the surface is met.
- The solution to the original problem is the solution to the real charges and image charges.
1 q 1 q'
=
4 0 ∣x−y∣ 4 0 ∣x−y '∣
1 q 1 q'
x=
4 0 ∣x x − y y∣ 4 0 ∣x x−
y ' y∣
1 q 1 q'
x=a =0= for all angles of the vector x
4 0 ∣a x − y y ∣ 4 0 ∣a x − y ' y ∣
q q'
− =
∣a x − y y∣ ∣a x − y ' y∣
- This must be true for all directions of the vector x, so we can pick out two different directions
to derive two independent equations which we can then solve for our two unknowns.
- Let us first choose the vector x so that it points in the same direction as the vector y: x = y
q q'
− =
∣a y − y y ∣ ∣a y−
y ' y ∣
q q'
− =
y−a a− y '
- Now pick the vector x to point perpendicular to the vector y and expand the magnitudes
according to ∣r 1−r 2∣= r 21r 22−2 r1⋅r2 :
q q'
− = 2
a y −2 a y x⋅y a y ' −2 a y ' x ⋅y
2 2 2
q q'
− = 2
a y a y ' 2
2 2
q2 q' 2
=
a 2+ y 2 a 2+ y ' 2
- We now have two independent equations (those in boxes above) in two unknowns q' and y'
and can solve for the unknowns:
q y ' −a
- Solve the first for q', q ' = and substitute in the second:
y−a
2
2
q 2
2
=
q y ' −a
y−a
a y a2 y ' 2
- After much algebra, get this in quadratic form and apply the quadratic equation:
y ' 2 a2 y 2
−y y ' a 2=0
2
a
y' =
y
q' =
q
a2
y
−a
y−a
a
q ' =− q
y
[ ]
q 1 1
x= −
4 0 ∣x−y∣ y a
a
x− y
y ∣ ∣
- If the vector y is placed on the z axis and the vectors are expressed in spherical coordinates:
[ ]
q 1 1
Φ(r)= −
4 π ϵ0 √ r + y −2 r y cos θ y r 2+a 2−2 r y cos θ
√
2 2 2
a2
- We can use this to find the induced surface charge density on the sphere.
[E2⋅n=
1
0
]
n =n0
- The electric field at the surface of a conductor is always parallel to the normal vector, and the
surface here is just the set of points where the radial spherical coordinate r equals the radius a.
[ E 2=
1
0
]
r=a
- Expand the electric field in terms of the potential and solve for the charge density:
= −0[ d
dr ] r =a
- Now plug in the solution for the potential we obtained earlier, evaluate, and plot:
2
a 3.0
1−
y2
q a
( ) 1+ a −2 a cos θ
y/a = 2
σ=− 2.5
2 3/ 2 y/a = 3
4πa y
( )
2
y/a = 4
2.0
2
y y
σ(-4πa^2/q)
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0
[ ]
a
Q q
1 q q y
x= −
4 0 ∣x−y∣ y a ∣x∣
a
x− y
y ∣ ∣
- In spherical coordinates with the vector y on the z axis:
[ ]
Q a
q 1 1 q y
r= −
4 0 r y −2 r y cos y r 2 a 2−2 r y cos r
2 2 2
a2
[
- Using = − 0
d
dr ]
r =a
to find the surface charge density yields:
a2
1−
y2
σ=−
q
2
4πa y
a
( ) 1+ a −2 a cos θ 3/ 2
+
1
4πa 2
a
Q+ q
y [ ]
( )
2
y2 y
- The first term is just the induced surface charge found previously and the second term is just
the remaining charge spread uniformly over the area of the sphere.
[ Q−q ' ]
= induced
Asphere
- Similarly, the force acting on charge q can immediately be written down as the superposition
of the forces between them using Coulomb's law:
q x−xi
F= ∑
4 0 i
qi 3
∣x−x i∣
F=
q
4 0[q'
y−y '
∣y−y '∣3
y
Q−q ' 3
∣y∣ ]
F=
1 q
4 π ϵ0 y 2 [
Q−
q a 3 (2 y 2−a 2)
y ( y 2−a 2)2 ]ŷ
- If instead of a charged, insulated conducting sphere, we have a sphere at fixed potential V, the
image charge at the center is replaced by the charge (Va).
1 1
G x , x ' = −
∣x−x '∣ x ' a
a ∣
x− x '
x' ∣
- In spherical coordinates, where both vectors are arbitrary now, not on the z axis:
1 1
G(x , x ' )= −
√ x +x ' −2 x x ' cos γ x ' x 2+a 2 −2 x x ' cos γ
√
2 2 2
Sphere Green Function
a2
- Here, γ is the angle between the two vectors, so that in spherical coordinates:
- Due to symmetry, this is the Green function for both cases, external to the sphere and internal
to the sphere.
- Keep in mind that in this Green function expression, x is the magnitude of the observation
point location vector x, and not the Cartesian coordinate. Likewise, x' is the magnitude of the
source point location vector x', so that in spherical coordinates, r = x and r' = x'. The variable a
is the radius of the sphere defining the boundary. If a specific problem uses the symbol R, b, etc.
for the sphere radius, this should be used in place of the a.
- For the Green function to be useful, we must know it and its derivative normal to the surface,
away from the volume of interest (the volume we are interested in is external, thus n' = -x'):
x 2−a 2
[ ]
dG
dn ' x ' =a
=−
a x 2a 2−2 x a cos 3/ 2
x=−
1
4
∮
d GD
d n'
da '
- This is essentially the sum of all the infinitesimal surface charge patches induced by a unit
charge weighted by the actual potential present at each surface patch. Plug in the Green function
and write out explicitly in spherical coordinates:
x=
1
x 2−a 2
4 ∮ a x 2a 2−2 x a cos 3/ 2
da '
2π π
Φ(x)=
1
∫ ∫
4π 0 0 (
Φ( a , θ ' , ϕ ')a 2 2
( x 2−a 2 )
(x +a −2 x a cos γ)3 /2 )
sin θ ' d θ ' d ϕ'
2 /2 2 2
1 x −a
x= ∫ ∫
4 0 0
Va 2 2
x a −2 x a cos 3/ 2
sin ' d ' d '
2 2 2
1 x −a
∫ ∫
4 0 / 2
−V a 2 2 3/2
sin ' d ' d '
x a −2 x a cos
where cos =cos cos ' sin sin ' cos −'
z2
1−
a2
z =V 1
z4 z2
a4 a2
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
Φ/V
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.0
1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0
z/a