CURRENT BYU 37

Solution 37

Solution

We are dealing with the flow of steady current between two spherical electrodes immersed in a large, homogeneous conducting medium.

+V/2 Radius a -V/2 Radius a Current Flow

1. Resistance of a Single Sphere

Consider a single sphere of radius $a$ in an infinite medium of resistivity $\rho$. The current density $J$ at a distance $r$ from the center is uniform radially outward:

$$ J = \frac{I}{4\pi r^2} $$

The electric field is $E = \rho J$. The potential difference between the surface of the sphere ($r=a$) and infinity is:

$$ V = \int_a^\infty E \, dr = \int_a^\infty \frac{\rho I}{4\pi r^2} \, dr = \frac{\rho I}{4\pi} \left[ -\frac{1}{r} \right]_a^\infty = \frac{\rho I}{4\pi a} $$

Thus, the resistance of a single isolated sphere is:

$$ R_{\text{sphere}} = \frac{V}{I} = \frac{\rho}{4\pi a} $$

2. Resistance of the System

When two spheres are separated by a large distance compared to their radii, the interaction between them is negligible. The total resistance of the medium between the two spheres is the sum of the resistances of each sphere (one acting as a source, the other as a sink):

$$ R_{\text{total}} = R_1 + R_2 $$

Initially, both spheres have radius $a$. So the total resistance $R_0$ is:

$$ R_0 = \frac{\rho}{4\pi a} + \frac{\rho}{4\pi a} = \frac{\rho}{2\pi a} $$

The initial current $I_0$ flowing through the battery of voltage $V$ is:

$$ I_0 = \frac{V}{R_0} = \frac{V}{\frac{\rho}{2\pi a}} = \frac{2\pi a V}{\rho} $$

3. Modifying the System

One sphere is replaced by another sphere of radius $\eta a$. The new total resistance $R’$ is:

$$ R’ = R_1 + R_{\text{new}} = \frac{\rho}{4\pi a} + \frac{\rho}{4\pi (\eta a)} $$ $$ R’ = \frac{\rho}{4\pi a} \left( 1 + \frac{1}{\eta} \right) = \frac{\rho}{4\pi a} \left( \frac{\eta + 1}{\eta} \right) $$

The new current $I’$ is:

$$ I’ = \frac{V}{R’} = \frac{V}{\frac{\rho}{4\pi a} \left( \frac{\eta + 1}{\eta} \right)} = \frac{4\pi a \eta V}{\rho (\eta + 1)} $$

4. Comparison and Calculation

Taking the ratio of $I’$ to $I_0$:

$$ \frac{I’}{I_0} = \frac{ \frac{4\pi a \eta V}{\rho (\eta + 1)} }{ \frac{2\pi a V}{\rho} } = \frac{4\pi a \eta V}{\rho (\eta + 1)} \cdot \frac{\rho}{2\pi a V} = \frac{2\eta}{\eta + 1} $$

Substituting the given values:

  • Initial Current $I_0 = 3.0$ A
  • Ratio $\eta = 0.5$
$$ I’ = I_0 \left( \frac{2\eta}{\eta + 1} \right) = 3.0 \times \left( \frac{2(0.5)}{0.5 + 1} \right) $$ $$ I’ = 3.0 \times \frac{1.0}{1.5} = 3.0 \times \frac{2}{3} = 2.0 \text{ A} $$