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.
The force,
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,
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.
The electric potential energy,
Again, this is similar to
The electric potential,
Electric potential
Graphically, the electric potential energy is the area under a force-distance graph between two points (by
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 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.
Consider a particle moving with charge
For a charged particle moving in a magnetic field,
Equating this force with the centripetal force in circular motion,
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: