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Electric Fields and Capacitors Solutions Physical Concepts 1. What is an electric field, and what does it tell you? A vector function of position indicating the strength and direction of the electric force on a charged object. 2. What are “lines of force,” and what force is it? Indicate the direction of a force on a positive test “charge”; their density indicates the strength of this force. They are useful for describing the effect of any non-contact force. 3. Electric field lines are drawn (a) from positive charges to negative charges 4. How is intensity indicated in a field map? By the density of the field lines. 5. What are equipotentials, and how are they experimentally determined? What is their relationship to electric field lines? Locations in space at which a test “charge” feels the same field strength and direction. They are places of equal potential energy, or, in terms of electrostatics, of equal voltage, and so can be identified with a voltmeter. Curves connecting equipotential points are always perpendicular to the field lines. 6. Directions of fields are indicated on field lines. Why are no directions indicated on equipotential lines? Potential energy is a scalar, not a vector, quantity. 7. How much work is done in moving a charge of 10 microcoulombs 1 meter along an equipotential of 10 volts? 0, since moving along an equipotential requires no work. 8. Explain how a gravitational field might be mapped. Sketch the gravitational field for two point masses a short distance apart. An electric field may be mapped by determining its equipotentials with, say, a voltmeter. A gravitational field of a very large object may be mapped by determining its equipotentials by releasing a small object at various heights above the surface and comparing velocities at impact. For a small (volume) mass, the deflection of a pendulum or spring loaded probe might measure the field strength directly. Such a field, of two point masses, looks exactly like that of two negative charges: 1 2