I recently skimmed through my tutor's physics book, it's not the greatest book out there since it doesn't provide much detail about how the physics works rather its more like a compilation for formulas and stuff.
I was wondering about how the following exposition works,
Say that we have two conducting metal balls, call one A with charge $q_{a}$ and radius $r_{a}$ while the other B with charge $q_{b}$ and radius $r_b$. Suppose we connect A and B with a wire. Then what will happen is that the charge will 'balance out' such that A is now $q'_{a}$ and B $q'_{b}$.
By the conservation of charges I know that $q_{a}+q_{b}=q'_{a} + q'_{b}$. What I can't understand is that why my book says $\frac{q'_{a}}{r_{a}}=\frac{q'_{b}}{r_{b}}$.
I suspect that $V'_{a}=V'_{b}$ so by the fact that $V=\frac{k Q}{r}$ we get the desired formula but I'm not too confident with that. Can someone give an inuitive explanation of this?
EDIT: I read somewhere that after the wire is connected the two ball's potential $V$ are the same. Why is that? For me is just so counter-intuitive since both balls have different charge values $q_{a}$ and $q_{b}$.
