Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byErika Waters Modified over 6 years ago
1
The forces between electrical charges have an electrical potential energy associated with this force. The total ME = KE + gravitational PE + elastic PE + electric PE.
2
If a positive charge is moved in a uniform electric field in the same direction as the field, there is a change (decrease) in the electric potential energy of that charge. ΔPEelectric = -qEΔd
3
It is the difference in potential that is important
It is the difference in potential that is important. If we set the initial d to be zero, then: PEelectric = -qEd This is only true for a uniform field.
4
“d” is the magnitude of displacement in the direction of the electric field. Perpendicular motion does not change the PE.
5
If there are two charges, another equation is needed
If there are two charges, another equation is needed. PEelectric = kq1q2/r The reference point is infinity. The ΔPEelectric is + for like charges and - for unlike charges.
6
What is the electric potential energy between two electrons that are two meters apart?
7
The electrical potential energy associated with an electron and proton is x J. What is the distance between these two charges?
8
PEelectric depends on the charge
PEelectric depends on the charge. A more practical concept is electric potential: PEelectric/q = V.
9
Electric potential is independent of charge
Electric potential is independent of charge. The reference point for electric potential is arbitrary, only the difference in potential is important. Therefore: ΔV = ΔPEelectric/q The unit is the volt, which is equal to one joule per coulomb.
10
As a one coulomb charge moves through a potential difference of one volt it gains (or loses) one joule of energy.
11
Remember: PEelectric = -qEd and ΔV = ΔPEelectric/q
Remember: PEelectric = -qEd and ΔV = ΔPEelectric/q. So: ΔV = Δ(-qEd/q) or ΔV = -ΔEd
12
Voltage difference between a point at infinity and a point near a point charge: ΔV = kq/r
13
These potentials are scalars, not vectors; there is no direction involved.
14
A 5. 0 mC point charge is at the origin, and a point charge of -2
A 5.0 mC point charge is at the origin, and a point charge of mC is on the x-axis at (3.0m,0.0m). Find the total potential difference resulting from these charges between a point with coordinates (0.0m, 4.0m) and a point infinitely far away.
15
A battery does work to move a charge
A battery does work to move a charge. As a charge moves through a 12V battery its potential is raised by 12V. If it is a 1 coulomb charge its energy is raised by 12 joules.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.