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Question: A ball of radius \[R\] carries a positive charge whose volume charge density depends only on the dis...

A ball of radius RR carries a positive charge whose volume charge density depends only on the distance rr from the ball's centre as: ρ=ρ0(1rR)\rho = {\rho _0}(1 - \dfrac{r}{R}) where ρ0{\rho _0} is constant. Assume ε\varepsilon as the permittivity of the ball. Then the magnitude of the electric field as a function of the distance rr outside the ball is given by :
A. E=ρ0R38εr2E = \dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{8\varepsilon {r^2}}}
B. E=ρ0R312εr2E = \dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{12\varepsilon {r^2}}}
C. E=ρ0R316εr2E = \dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{16\varepsilon {r^2}}}
D. E=ρ0R324εr2E = \dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{24\varepsilon {r^2}}}

Explanation

Solution

The electric field due to a charge at a point is the force acting on a unit positive charge when it is placed at that point. Electric field due to continuous charge distribution is the integration over the whole charge distribution. Gauss’s law states that the total flux due to a volume is proportional to the charge enclosed.

Formula used:
Gauss’s law is given by,
ϕ=sE.dS=qε0\phi = \oint\limits_s {\vec E} .d\vec S = \dfrac{q}{{{\varepsilon _0}}}
where, E\vec E is the electric field, SS is the closed surface placed in the electric field.
Total charge of continuous charge distribution,
q=ρdvq = \int {\rho dv}
where, ρ\rho is the volume charge density and dvdvis the volume element.

Complete step by step answer:
We know that the electric field at a point due to charge is nothing but the force acting on a unit positive charge due to the charge at that point. For multiple charges since the electric field follows the superposition principle it is the sum of the electric field due to each charge. For a continuous charge distribution it is the integration over the source points. Here, we have a ball of radius RRwhich carries a charge distribution ρ=ρ0(1rR)\rho = {\rho _0}(1 - \dfrac{r}{R}).

Now, Gauss’s law states that the total electric flux due to a closed surface is equal to the 1ε\dfrac{1}{\varepsilon } times charge enclosed by the surface. Mathematically,
ϕ=sE.dS=qε\phi = \oint\limits_s {\vec E} .d\vec S = \dfrac{q}{\varepsilon }
where, E\vec E is the electric field, SS is the closed surface placed in the electric field.
Here, the total charge is the integration over the whole distribution. So, from gauss law we can have,
ϕ=sE.dS=qε\phi = \oint\limits_s {\vec E} .d\vec S = \dfrac{q}{\varepsilon }
sE.dS=ρdvε\Rightarrow \oint\limits_s {\vec E} .d\vec S = \dfrac{{\int {\rho dv} }}{\varepsilon }
Since the charge distribution is symmetric the electric is also uniform.
EsdS=1ερ0(1rR)4πr2drE\oint\limits_s {dS} = \dfrac{1}{\varepsilon }\int {{\rho _0}(1 - \dfrac{r}{R})4\pi {r^2}dr}
E4πr2=1ε0Rρ0(1rR)4πr2dr\Rightarrow E \cdot 4\pi {r^2} = \dfrac{1}{\varepsilon }\int\limits_0^R {{\rho _0}(1 - \dfrac{r}{R})4\pi {r^2}dr}
E4πr2=4πε0Rρ0r2dr0Rρ0r3Rdr\Rightarrow E \cdot 4\pi {r^2} = \dfrac{{4\pi }}{\varepsilon }\int\limits_0^R {{\rho _0}{r^2}dr - \int\limits_0^R {{\rho _0}\dfrac{{{r^3}}}{R}dr} }

Integrating and putting the limits we have,
E4πr2=4πε(ρ0R33ρ0R44R)E \cdot 4\pi {r^2} = \dfrac{{4\pi }}{\varepsilon }\left( {\dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{3} - {\rho _0}\dfrac{{{R^4}}}{{4R}}} \right)
Er2=1ερ0R312\Rightarrow E \cdot {r^2} = \dfrac{1}{\varepsilon }\dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{12}}
E=ρ0R312εr2\therefore E = \dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{12\varepsilon {r^2}}}
Hence, the electric field outside the ball is given by, E=ρ0R312εr2E = \dfrac{{{\rho _0}{R^3}}}{{12\varepsilon {r^2}}}

Hence, option B is the correct answer.

Note: Gauss’s law can be applied to find any electric field when the charge distribution is symmetric. If the distribution is symmetric the electric field due to the distribution is uniform. For a uniform electric field it becomes a constant of integration and we can easily perform the integration to find the electric field.