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Electric/Electrostatic Potential


Electric (or electrostatic) potential can be defined as the work done in bringing unit positive charge from infinity to that point in the field - it is also defined as the potential energy per unit of charge associated with a static (time-invariant) electric field

It is measured in volts (V) .

It is a scalar quantity.

The difference of electrical potential between two points is known as potential difference or voltage.

You are used to living in the matter dimension - one in which objects 'gravitate' towards or away from a point because of the gradient of the landscape around them. A stationary ball will always roll downhill if placed on a sloping surface and remain stationary on a level surface.

Think of an 'electric dimension'. One where charges create the lanscape that all charged objects react to.

Look at the above definition of electric potential and think of it in terms of graviational potential. We could say that gravitational potential is the potential energy per unit of wight associated with a gravitational field - the two are comparable

Matter dimension
Electric dimension
Height above sea level (m)
Electric potential (V)

Gravitational potential energy

(Nm = J)

= weight x height

Electric potential energy 

(CV = J)

= charge x electric potential

Weight (N)
Charge (C)

 

If you think of the electric field as a 'landscape for charge' - hills and vales that will make a free 'rolling' charge accelerate and/or decelerate as it makes its way through it, then you can think of electric potential as the 'height' of various points on that 'landscape'

You can plot points of equipotential around a charge to get a 'contour map' of that electric landscape.

A point in space an infinite distance from any charge is said to be at zero volts.

On the 3-d diagram above you see that as a 'plane' - a flat area in the electric dimension landscape that goes off into infinity.

Look at how the 3-d diagram shows a steeper gradient to the field between the charges - to correspond to the closer contour lines.

The gradient of field is called the electric intensity or electric field strength.

Electric potential is a scalar value. This gives people problems because it has a sign (positive or negative). You need to think of the sign as an indication of whether that point in space is above or below the zero plane.

To work out the potential of a point affected by the fields of several charges you need to work out what effect each charge has on the height of the 'terrain' at that point. A positive charge will lift it above zero and a negative charge below zero. You simply add the 'adjustments in electric height' together to get the final value.

Sample Question:

What is the electrostatic potential at point X?

using the equation:

work out the potential at X from each of the charges.

The result from the positive charge is 1.12 x 104 volts (point X is lifted by the presence of that charge) and from the negative charge it is -1.12 x 104 volts (point X is lowered by the presence of that charge). The sum of these is zero volt potential (X is at zero potential - the same level as it would be if no charges were present at all!).