Cavendish Spheres 5B30.20

attachment:CavendishSpheres_5B3020.jpg

The Cavendish Spheres, Faraday Cage, and electrometer are located in [:ElectrostaticsCabinet:Electrostatics Cabinet], B1.

The 1000V DC Power Supply is located in [:ElectrostaticsCabinet:Electrostatics Cabinet], B2.

The proof plane is located in [:ElectrostaticsCabinet:Electrostatics Cabinet], A1.

Cavendish used an apparatus consisting of two concentric spheres, insulated from each other and from ground, to prove the inverse square law of electrostatic force.

Preliminaries:

At this point the outer bottom hemisphere is grounded and the inner sphere is at 1000V. Make some measurements to gain confidence:

Here is the actual Cavendish Experiment:

Discussion: The fact that the needle does not deflect on the last measurement shows that the inner sphere has been left neutral, and was proposed by Cavendish as a consequence of the inverse square law of the electrostatic force. If the electrostatic force dropped off faster than inverse square, the inner and outer spheres would end up with charges of the same sign. If the electrostatic force dropped off slower than inverse square, the inner and outer spheres would end up with charges of opposite sign. Only if the electrostatic force drops off as inverse square can the inner sphere end up with no charge.

Cavendish's account of his experiment may be found in "The Electrical Researches of Henry Cavendish", edited by James Clerk Maxwell, paragraphs 217-234.

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