Question 7.14: Imagine two concentric metal spherical shells (Fig. 7.44).Th...

Imagine two concentric metal spherical shells (Fig. 7.44).The inner one (radius a) carries a charge Q(t), and the outer one (radius b) an opposite charge −Q(t). The space between them is filled with Ohmic material of conductivity σ, so a radial current flows:  J=\sigma E=\sigma \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon _{0}}\frac{Q}{r^{2}}\hat{\pmb{r}};I=-Q=\int{J.da}=\frac{\sigma Q}{\epsilon _{0}}. .This configuration is spherically symmetrical, so the magnetic field has to be zero(the only direction it could possibly point is radial, and \pmb{∇ · B} = 0 ⇒\oint{\pmb{B} · da} =B(4\pi r^{2}) = 0, so \pmb{B = 0}).. What? I thought currents produce magnetic fields! Isn’t that what Biot-Savart and Ampère taught us? How can there be a J with no accompanying B?

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This is not a static configuration: Q, E, and J are all functions of time; Ampère and Biot-Savart do not apply. The displacement current

J_{d}=\epsilon _{0}\frac{\partial E}{\partial t}=\frac{1}{4\pi}\frac{\dot{Q} }{r^{2}}\hat{\pmb{r}}=-\sigma \frac{Q}{4\pi \epsilon _{0}r^{2}}\hat{\pmb{r}}

exactly cancels the conduction current (in Eq. 7.37), and the magnetic field (determined by \pmb{∇ · B }= 0, \pmb{∇ × B = 0}) is indeed zero.

∇ × B = μ_0J + μ_{0}\epsilon_{0}\frac{\partial E}{\partial t} .        (7.37)

 

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