PHYSICS S5 Unit 7: Electric Field Potential and Gravitational Potential
About Course
The course Unit 7: Electric Field Potential and Gravitational Potential is a crucial unit in intermediate physics that focuses on the concept of potential as a scalar quantity to simplify the analysis of fields (Electric and Gravitational). Instead of dealing with the vector quantities of force and field strength, this unit introduces a more energy-efficient way to describe how objects interact.
- Electric Field and Potential
This section applies the concept of potential to the electric force, which is produced by charges.
- Electric Potential Energy (UE)
- Definition: The work done by an external agent to bring a test charge (q0) from infinity to a specific point near a source charge (Q) without acceleration. It is measured in Joules (J).
- Work and Energy: Since the electric force is conservative, the work done in moving a charge between two points equals the change in electric potential energy (ΔUE) of the system.
- Electric Potential (V)
- Definition: The Electric Potential at any point is the electric potential energy per unit positive test charge (q0). It is a characteristic of the field itself, independent of the test charge.
V = UE/q0
It is a scalar quantity measured in Volts (V), where 1V = 1J/C}.
- Potential Difference (ΔV): The difference in electric potential between two points, often called voltage. The work done (W) to move a charge (q) between two points is:
W = q /ΔV
- Relationship to Field (E): The electric field strength is related to the rate of change of potential with distance (the negative potential gradient):
E = -ΔV/Δx
This means the electric field points in the direction of decreasing potential.
- Equipotential Surfaces
- Concept: A surface on which all points have the same electric potential.
- Property: The electric field lines are always perpendicular to the equipotential surfaces. No work is done when a charge moves along an equipotential surface.
- Gravitational Field and Potential
This section mirrors the electric field concepts but applies them to the gravitational force, produced by masses.
- Gravitational Potential Energy (UG)
- Near Earth’s Surface: UG = mgh.
- For Large Distances: Defined as the work done to move a mass (m) from infinity to a point near a source mass (M). The potential energy is always negative because gravity is always attractive, and UG is defined as zero at infinity:
UG = -G Mm/r
- Gravitational Potential (VG)
- Definition: The Gravitational Potential at a point is the gravitational potential energy per unit mass (m) at that point. It is a characteristic of the gravitational field.
VG = UG/m = -GM/r
It is a scalar quantity measured in Joules per kilogram (J/kg).
- Property: Gravitational potential is always negative and always increases (becomes less negative) as you move away from the central mass.
III. Analogies and Comparison
A key goal of the unit is to recognize the strong mathematical and conceptual parallels between the two fields:
|
Concept |
Electric Field (Charge Q) |
Gravitational Field (Mass M) |
|
Field Strength |
E α Q/r2 |
G α M/r2 |
|
Potential |
V α Q/r (Scalar) |
VG α M/r (Scalar) |
|
Force Type |
Attractive or Repulsive |
Always Attractive |
|
Field Direction |
Points from high V to low V |
Points from low VG to high VG |
Course Content
Unit 7: Electric Field Potential and Gravitational Potential
-
Introduction
11:25 -
Electric Potential
21:54 -
Electrodinamics
23:58 -
Gravitational Energy
25:19 -
TEST
01:00:00