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===== Relationships between Force, Field, Potential, and Energy ===== | ===== Relationships between Force, Field, Potential, and Energy ===== | ||
+ | You may have noticed in reading about [[184_notes: | ||
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+ | {{youtube> | ||
==== General Relationships ==== | ==== General Relationships ==== | ||
- | This are always true | + | The figure below summarizes the //general// relationships between the four quantities. **These relationships |
- | If you know one quantity can get to any of the others | + | [{{ 184_notes: |
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+ | A couple of things to notice about these relationships: | ||
+ | * Electric Field and Electric Force are **vectors** - They have a magnitude and direction at every location in space. | ||
+ | * Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy are **scalars** - They only have a magnitude at every location in space. | ||
+ | * Electric Force and Electric Potential Energy describe an **interaction** - They require two charged objects or two systems of charged objects; | ||
+ | * Electric Field and Electric Potential describe a **single** charge or system | ||
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+ | ==== Example for Point Charges ==== | ||
+ | Over the past two weeks, we have been modeling point charges. Using the general relationships above, we found: | ||
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+ | **Note: these equations are only true for point charges**. They are not true for other types or shapes of charges. However, we see very similar patterns for the point charges. | ||
+ | * Electric Field and Electric Force are both **vectors** - They both point in the ˆr direction (or −ˆr direction depending on the kinds of the charge). | ||
+ | * Electric Potential and Electric Potential Energy are both **scalars** - There is no direction associated with them. | ||
+ | * Electric Force and Electric Energy describe an **interaction** - There must be (at the minimum) two point charges, which is why there are two q's in the equation | ||
+ | * Electric Field and Electric Potential describe a **single** charge - There is only one q in each equation. | ||
- | === Example | + | [{{184_notes: |