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Image problem with the sheet not grounded

Physics Asked by E2n on January 29, 2021

This is the question of the classic image problem in which a point charge $q$ is placed at height $h$ above a grounded plate.
Only this time the plate is not grounded.
When the plate is grounded the force on a charge in the region between the point charge and the plate is proportional to $2q$ because there is equal $-q$ on the sheet.
But due to induction an equal $+q$ charge should also be induced on the other side of the plate thereby causing the force to be proportional to only $q$.
We can say that this is wrong since the plate is grounded so the induced positive charge will flow down to the earth causing the total force to be proportional to $2q$.
But if this plate is not grounded then what shall be the case ? Will the force be proportional to $q$ or $2q$?

One Answer

It doesn't matter if the plate is grounded or not, the field outside the plate is the same either way. You know this because the only constraint on that field is that its parallel component at the plate must be zero. That suffices to specify the image-charge field, as long as there is no net charge density on the infinite plate. If there was a net charge density on an ungrounded plate, that just adds a constant field perpendicular to the plate, but if there's no net charge density (i.e., no infinite charge on the plate), whether the plate is grounded or not will simply result in a negligible charge distributed over the whole infinite plate. In short, pulling charge from the ground simply distributes that charge over the whole infinite plate, with negligible effect.

Answered by Ken G on January 29, 2021

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