Electric Potential
Electric Potential
Another example
1.
2.
If you pushed a positive test charge in the direction of the blue arrow,
would it take work?
3.
If you pushed the positive test charge in the direction of the blue arrow,
would it gain or lose electric potential energy?
4.
What would happen if you released the charge after pushing it toward the
center?
Electric Potential
Consider the electric field created by this large positive charge. The direction of the electric
field is in the direction that a positive test charge would be pushed; in this case, the direction
is outward away from sphere. Work would be required to move a positive test charge
towards the sphere against the electric field. The amount of force involved in doing the work
depends on the amount of charge being moved. The greater the charge on the test charge,
the greater the repulsive force and the more work that would have to be done on it to move
it the same distance.
If two objects of different charge - with one being twice the charge of the other - are moved
the same distance into the electric field, then the object with twice the charge would require
twice the force and thus twice the amount of work. This work would change the potential
energy by an amount that is equal to the amount of work done. Thus, the electric potential
energy is dependent upon the amount of charge on the object experiencing the field and
upon the location within the field.
Electric Potential
Electric potential energy depends on the
charge of the object experiencing the
electric field. The greater the charge on the
test charge, the greater the electric
potential energy.
To continue the gravity analogy, a boulder
sitting on top of a cliff has more potential
energy than a pebble sitting at the same
spot.
Electric Potential
Electric potential is purely location
dependent. Electric potential is the
potential energy per charge.
True or False?
Electric potential at a point is a property
of the space, whereas electric potential
energy cannot exist unless a charge is
placed at that point.
CONCLUSION:
Electric Potential