Charge and Field

An electric field is a region in space where a charged particle experiences an electric force. Electric field lines show the direction that a small positive test charge would experience a force if it were placed in the field. The greater the density of field lines, the greater the force.

Force and Field Strength

The force, is given by:

The force has an inverse-square relationship with distance. The electric force is different from gravity in that it can be either attractive or repulsive depending on the charges of the particles.

The field strength, , is the force per unit charge, and is given by:

In a uniform electric field, the field strength throughout the field is constant, similar to how the field strength in a uniform gravitational field is constant. The force on an object in a uniform field is also constant. In a uniform field:

The electric force and field are both vector quantities, whereas energy and potential are both scalar quantities.

Energy and Potential

The electric potential energy, , is given by the negative integral of force with respect to distance:

Again, this is similar to for gravitational potential energy. The potential energy has an inverse proportional relationship with distance.

The electric potential, , is the energy per unit charge, and is given by:

Electric potential and field strength are both properties of the field itself (as they are per unit charge), whereas potential energy and force act on a specific object within the field.

Graphically, the electric potential energy is the area under a force-distance graph between two points (by ) (possibly requiring a negative sign). Thus, the force is related to the gradient of a energy-distance graph.

Similarly, the potential is the area under a field strength against distance graph, and the field-strength is related to the gradient of a potential-distance graph.

Equipotential surfaces

Equipotential surfaces are surfaces along which all points have the same potential. They are always perpendicular to the direction of field lines. In a uniform field, equipotential surfaces are equally spaced.

Force on a moving charge

Consider a particle moving with charge moving through a magnetic field at velocity . The 'current' produced by this particle in a time is , and substituting into gives:

For a charged particle moving in a magnetic field, . The left-hand rule can be used to find the direction of the force (taking care that current in the left-hand rule is conventional current, i.e. the direction of flow of positive charge).

Equating this force with the centripetal force in circular motion, , can be used to find the radius of circular motion for a charged particle moving in a magnetic field.

Electron charge

The charge on the electron is discrete; all charged particles[1] have charge equal to some integer multiple of the elementary charge, .

This was first shown in Millikan's oil drop experiment. In the experiment:

  • An atomiser creates a mist with small droplets of oil.
  • The droplets are ionised by X-rays, causing the droplets to become charged.
  • A potential difference is applied across two metal plates, creating an electric field.
  • The oil droplets are observed as they fall, and balancing forces allows for the calculation of the charge on the oil droplets.