How Does One Charge Know Another Is There?
Coulomb's Law gives force between two specific charges.
But what happens in the space between them?
The charge creates a condition in space — the electric field — and anything placed in that space responds to it.
Electric Field Defined: Force per Unit Charge
The electric field
= electric field (N/C) = force on a positive test charge- The field exists in space regardless of whether
is present
Electric Field of a Point Charge
- Involves one source charge
(not two) - Same inverse-square relationship as Coulomb's Law
- Coulomb:
(two charges, gives force) - Field:
(one charge, gives field in space)
Direction of the Electric Field
Direction depends on the sign of the source charge:
- Positive source: field points away — positive test charge is repelled outward
- Negative source: field points toward — positive test charge is attracted inward
The field direction is defined for a positive test charge.
Worked Example: Step 1 — Find the Field
Given: A
Direction: Source is positive → field points away from the charge, radially outward at
Worked Example: Step 2 — Find the Force
From Step 1:
Place a
Check: Which Formula Needs Two Charges?
Which formula requires two charges — and which requires only one?
- A) Coulomb's Law needs two; the field formula needs one
- B) Both formulas need two charges
- C) Both formulas need only one charge
- D) The field formula needs two; Coulomb's Law needs one
Formula Check: Answer and Explanation
A) Coulomb's Law needs two; field formula needs one
— two charges interact — one source charge defines the field
Don't mix them up:
Bridge: From Formula to Field Line Diagrams
The formula gives the magnitude of
Field line diagrams show the field everywhere at once — direction and relative strength across the whole space.
Coming up: 5 rules for drawing field lines, then 4 key configurations.
Five Rules for Drawing Electric Field Lines
- Lines originate on + charges; terminate on − charges (or → ∞)
- Direction at any point = tangent to the field line
- Density ∝ field strength — denser = stronger
- Lines never cross — one field direction per point
- Lines are perpendicular to conductor surfaces
Isolated Positive Charge: Field Lines Radiate Outward
- Lines point away from the positive charge in all directions
- Denser near the charge (stronger field) — spreads at distance
Isolated Negative Charge: Field Lines Point Inward
- Lines point toward the negative charge from all directions
- Same density pattern — denser near the charge
Dipole: Field Lines Curve from Plus to Minus
Field is strongest between the two charges — lines are most dense there.
Two Like Charges: Repelling Field Line Patterns
- Lines repel each other and curve outward
- Null point between the charges — field cancels to zero
Uniform Field: Evenly Spaced Parallel Lines
Between two parallel plates of opposite charge:
- Field lines are parallel and evenly spaced
- Uniform density → constant field strength everywhere between plates
- Field direction: from the positive plate toward the negative plate
- This is the standard lab setup for studying electric forces
Field Line Diagram Check: Finding the Errors
A student's diagram shows: (1) two field lines that cross each other; (2) field lines getting less dense closer to the charge; (3) a line that starts in empty space.
Which rule does each error violate?
Apply the 5 rules from Slide 11.
Field Line Error Check: Rules Identified
Error 1: Crossing lines → Rule 4 — one field direction per point
Error 2: Less dense near charge → Rule 3 — stronger field near charge; lines must be denser there
Error 3: Line starts in empty space → Rule 1 — lines originate only on charges
Bridge: Field Defined, Now Use It for Force
You know the electric field everywhere around a source charge.
When you place any charge
The sign of
Force on a Charge in an Electric Field
- Positive
: force in the same direction as - Negative
: force in the opposite direction to
The field direction is defined for a positive test charge — negative charges always respond oppositely.
Proton vs. Electron in Uniform Field
Same
Worked Example: Force in a Uniform Field
Given: Uniform field
Proton (
Electron (
Equal magnitude — opposite directions. Electron accelerates ~1836× more.
Direction Check: Negative Charge in a Field
Field points right. A charge of
Which direction is the force?
- A) Right — same as the field
- B) Left — opposite to the field
- C) Zero — the charge cancels the field
- D) Upward — perpendicular to the field
Negative Charge Direction: Opposite to Field
B) To the left — opposite to the field
- Negative
→ force opposite to - Option C is wrong: the charge responds to the field — it doesn't cancel it
Key Takeaways: Field Concept and Formula
✓
✓
✓ Positive source → away; negative source → toward
Field lines show force direction — not paths
Key Takeaways: Field Lines and Force
✓ Field lines: originate on + charges, end on − charges, never cross
✓ Denser lines = stronger field — density is physical, not artistic
✓
Negative charge: force opposite to
Coming Up: Electric Potential and Energy
Lesson 4 of 5: Electric Potential
- The energy stored in the arrangement of charges
- From force
and field to potential - Why understanding potential is essential for circuits
Prepare: understand that the field