Exercises: Electric Potential
Work through each section in order. Show your work for all calculation problems. Pay attention to signs — they carry physical meaning.
Recall / Warm-Up
Which of the following best distinguishes electric potential from the electric field ?
A positive charge is moved opposite to the direction the electric force pushes it. What happens to its electric potential energy?
The work done by a constant force over a displacement is . Which energy principle directly connects this to electric potential energy?
Fluency Practice
The electric potential at a distance from a point charge is given by , where . What are the SI units of electric potential?
A point charge of is fixed in space. Calculate the electric potential at a point from the charge. Use .
A point charge of is fixed in space. What is the electric potential at a distance of from the charge? Use .
A charge of is moved through a potential difference of (from low to high potential). How much work is done by an external agent in moving the charge?
A charge of moves from a point at to a point at . Calculate the work done by the electric force on this charge.
Mixed Practice
A point charge is at the origin. At which distance from the charge is the electric potential equal to ? Use .
A charge is released from rest near a positive source charge where the electric potential is high. Which statement correctly describes what happens?
Looking at a diagram that shows electric field lines radiating outward from a positive point charge, where should the equipotential surfaces be drawn?
For the formula , as approaches infinity, approaches ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ . This means the potential at infinity is taken as the ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ reference point, and the potential never equals zero at any ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ distance from a point charge.
A charge starts at rest near another positive charge where the potential is . It is released and moves to a point where . Using conservation of energy, what is the kinetic energy gained by the charge?
Word Problems
A fixed point charge of is located at the origin. Two points, A and B, are located at distances and from the charge, respectively. Use .
Calculate the electric potential at point A.
A small test charge of is moved from point A to point B. How much work must an external agent do on the test charge?
An electron (charge ) is accelerated from rest through a potential difference of in a cathode-ray tube.
What kinetic energy does the electron gain? Express your answer in joules.
A proton (charge , mass ) is released from rest at a point where the electric potential is . It travels to a point where .
Using conservation of energy, find the speed of the proton at the final point.
Error Analysis
Student's work:
"The electric field at is ."
"Since the electric potential equals the electric field at that point, ."
A student calculates the electric potential at a point near a charge. Read their work and identify the error.
Student's reasoning:
"Near a positive charge, the electric potential is large and positive. Since potential energy is and both and the potential energy are large, the negative electron has a lot of potential energy here. So the electron is unlikely to move toward the positive charge — it would have to give up energy to do so."
A student reasons about a negative charge near a positive source charge. Read their reasoning and identify the mistake.
Challenge
Two point charges are fixed: at the origin, and at . Calculate the electric potential at the point (midway between the two charges). Use .
A topographic map uses closely spaced contour lines to show steep terrain and widely spaced lines to show gentle slopes. Explain how this analogy applies to electric potential maps showing equipotential lines. In your explanation, describe what the "steepness" represents physically and how you could determine where the electric field is strongest from an equipotential map.