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Electric field

An electric field (sometimes E-field[1]) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them.[2] It also refers to the physical field for a system of charged particles.[3] Electric fields originate from electric charges and time-varying electric currents. Electric fields and magnetic fields are both manifestations of the electromagnetic field, one of the four fundamental interactions (also called forces) of nature.

Electric field
Effects of an electric field. The girl is touching an electrostatic generator, which charges her body with a high voltage. Her hair, which is charged with the same polarity, is repelled by the electric field of her head and stands out from her head.
Common symbols
E
SI unitvolt per meter (V/m)
In SI base unitsm⋅kg⋅s−3⋅A−1

Electric fields are important in many areas of physics, and are exploited in electrical technology. In atomic physics and chemistry, for instance, the electric field is the attractive force holding the atomic nucleus and electrons together in atoms. It is also the force responsible for chemical bonding between atoms that result in molecules.

The electric field is defined as a vector field that associates to each point in space the electrostatic (Coulomb) force per unit of charge exerted on an infinitesimal positive test charge at rest at that point.[4][5][6] The derived SI unit for the electric field is the volt per meter (V/m), which is equal to the newton per coulomb (N/C).[7]

Description

 
Electric field of a positive point electric charge suspended over an infinite sheet of conducting material. The field is depicted by electric field lines, lines which follow the direction of the electric field in space.

The electric field is defined at each point in space as the force per unit charge that would be experienced by a vanishingly small positive test charge if held stationary at that point.[8]: 469–70  As the electric field is defined in terms of force, and force is a vector (i.e. having both magnitude and direction), it follows that an electric field is a vector field.[8]: 469–70  Fields that may be defined in this manner are sometimes referred to as force fields. The electric field acts between two charges similarly to the way the gravitational field acts between two masses, as they both obey an inverse-square law with distance.[9] This is the basis for Coulomb's law, which states that, for stationary charges, the electric field varies with the source charge and varies inversely with the square of the distance from the source. This means that if the source charge were doubled, the electric field would double, and if you move twice as far away from the source, the field at that point would be only one-quarter its original strength.

The electric field can be visualized with a set of lines whose direction at each point is the same as the field's, a concept introduced by Michael Faraday,[10] whose term 'lines of force' is still sometimes used. This illustration has the useful property that the field's strength is proportional to the density of the lines.[11] Field lines due to stationary charges have several important properties, including always originating from positive charges and terminating at negative charges, they enter all good conductors at right angles, and they never cross or close in on themselves.[8]: 479  The field lines are a representative concept; the field actually permeates all the intervening space between the lines. More or fewer lines may be drawn depending on the precision to which it is desired to represent the field.[10] The study of electric fields created by stationary charges is called electrostatics.

Faraday's law describes the relationship between a time-varying magnetic field and the electric field. One way of stating Faraday's law is that the curl of the electric field is equal to the negative time derivative of the magnetic field.[12]: 327  In the absence of time-varying magnetic field, the electric field is therefore called conservative (i.e. curl-free).[12]: 24, 90–91  This implies there are two kinds of electric fields: electrostatic fields and fields arising from time-varying magnetic fields.[12]: 305–307  While the curl-free nature of the static electric field allows for a simpler treatment using electrostatics, time-varying magnetic fields are generally treated as a component of a unified electromagnetic field. The study of time varying magnetic and electric fields is called electrodynamics.

Mathematical formulation

Electric fields are caused by electric charges, described by Gauss's law,[13] and time varying magnetic fields, described by Faraday's law of induction.[14] Together, these laws are enough to define the behavior of the electric field. However, since the magnetic field is described as a function of electric field, the equations of both fields are coupled and together form Maxwell's equations that describe both fields as a function of charges and currents.

 
Evidence of an electric field: styrofoam peanuts clinging to a cat's fur due to static electricity. The triboelectric effect causes an electrostatic charge to build up on the fur due to the cat's motions. The electric field of the charge causes polarization of the molecules of the styrofoam due to electrostatic induction, resulting in a slight attraction of the light plastic pieces to the charged fur. This effect is also the cause of static cling in clothes.

Electrostatics

In the special case of a steady state (stationary charges and currents), the Maxwell-Faraday inductive effect disappears. The resulting two equations (Gauss's law   and Faraday's law with no induction term  ), taken together, are equivalent to Coulomb's law, which states that a particle with electric charge   at position   exerts a force on a particle with charge   at position   of:[15]

 
where   is the unit vector in the direction from point   to point  , and ε0 is the electric constant (also known as "the absolute permittivity of free space") with the unit C2⋅m−2⋅N−1.

Note that  , the vacuum electric permittivity, must be substituted with  , permittivity, when charges are in non-empty media. When the charges   and   have the same sign this force is positive, directed away from the other charge, indicating the particles repel each other. When the charges have unlike signs the force is negative, indicating the particles attract. To make it easy to calculate the Coulomb force on any charge at position   this expression can be divided by   leaving an expression that only depends on the other charge (the source charge)[16][6]

 
This is the electric field at point   due to the point charge  ; it is a vector-valued function equal to the Coulomb force per unit charge that a positive point charge would experience at the position  . Since this formula gives the electric field magnitude and direction at any point   in space (except at the location of the charge itself,  , where it becomes infinite) it defines a vector field. From the above formula it can be seen that the electric field due to a point charge is everywhere directed away from the charge if it is positive, and toward the charge if it is negative, and its magnitude decreases with the inverse square of the distance from the charge.

The Coulomb force on a charge of magnitude   at any point in space is equal to the product of the charge and the electric field at that point

 
The SI unit of the electric field is the newton per coulomb (N/C), or volt per meter (V/m); in terms of the SI base units it is kg⋅m⋅s−3⋅A−1.

Superposition principle

Due to the linearity of Maxwell's equations, electric fields satisfy the superposition principle, which states that the total electric field, at a point, due to a collection of charges is equal to the vector sum of the electric fields at that point due to the individual charges.[6] This principle is useful in calculating the field created by multiple point charges. If charges   are stationary in space at points  , in the absence of currents, the superposition principle says that the resulting field is the sum of fields generated by each particle as described by Coulomb's law:

 
where   is the unit vector in the direction from point   to point  .

Continuous charge distributions

The superposition principle allows for the calculation of the electric field due to a continuous distribution of charge   (where   is the charge density in coulombs per cubic meter). By considering the charge   in each small volume of space   at point   as a point charge, the resulting electric field,  , at point   can be calculated as

 
where   is the unit vector pointing from   to  . The total field is then found by "adding up" the contributions from all the increments of volume by integrating over the volume of the charge distribution  :
 
Similar equations follow for a surface charge with continuous charge distribution   where   is the charge density in coulombs per square meter
 
and for line charges with continuous charge distribution   where   is the charge density in coulombs per meter.
 

Electric potential

If a system is static, such that magnetic fields are not time-varying, then by Faraday's law, the electric field is curl-free. In this case, one can define an electric potential, that is, a function   such that  .[17] This is analogous to the gravitational potential. The difference between the electric potential at two points in space is called the potential difference (or voltage) between the two points.

In general, however, the electric field cannot be described independently of the magnetic field. Given the magnetic vector potential, A, defined so that  , one can still define an electric potential   such that:

 
where   is the gradient of the electric potential and   is the partial derivative of A with respect to time.

Faraday's law of induction can be recovered by taking the curl of that equation [18]

 
which justifies, a posteriori, the previous form for E.

Continuous vs. discrete charge representation

The equations of electromagnetism are best described in a continuous description. However, charges are sometimes best described as discrete points; for example, some models may describe electrons as point sources where charge density is infinite on an infinitesimal section of space.

A charge   located at   can be described mathematically as a charge density  , where the Dirac delta function (in three dimensions) is used. Conversely, a charge distribution can be approximated by many small point charges.

Electrostatic fields

 
Illustration of the electric field surrounding a positive (red) and a negative (blue) charge

Electrostatic fields are electric fields that do not change with time. Such fields are present when systems of charged matter are stationary, or when electric currents are unchanging. In that case, Coulomb's law fully describes the field.[19]

Parallels between electrostatic and gravitational fields

Coulomb's law, which describes the interaction of electric charges:

 
is similar to Newton's law of universal gravitation:
 
(where  ).

This suggests similarities between the electric field E and the gravitational field g, or their associated potentials. Mass is sometimes called "gravitational charge".[20]

Electrostatic and gravitational forces both are central, conservative and obey an inverse-square law.

Uniform fields

 
Illustration of the electric field between two parallel conductive plates of finite size (known as a parallel plate capacitor). In the middle of the plates, far from any edges, the electric field is very nearly uniform.

A uniform field is one in which the electric field is constant at every point. It can be approximated by placing two conducting plates parallel to each other and maintaining a voltage (potential difference) between them; it is only an approximation because of boundary effects (near the edge of the planes, electric field is distorted because the plane does not continue). Assuming infinite planes, the magnitude of the electric field E is:

 
where ΔV is the potential difference between the plates and d is the distance separating the plates. The negative sign arises as positive charges repel, so a positive charge will experience a force away from the positively charged plate, in the opposite direction to that in which the voltage increases. In micro- and nano-applications, for instance in relation to semiconductors, a typical magnitude of an electric field is in the order of 106 V⋅m−1, achieved by applying a voltage of the order of 1 volt between conductors spaced 1 µm apart.

Electrodynamic fields

 
The electric field (lines with arrows) of a charge (+) induces surface charges (red and blue areas) on metal objects due to electrostatic induction.

Electrodynamic fields are electric fields which do change with time, for instance when charges are in motion. In this case, a magnetic field is produced in accordance with Ampère's circuital law (with Maxwell's addition), which, along with Maxwell's other equations, defines the magnetic field,  , in terms of its curl:

 
where   is the current density,   is the vacuum permeability, and   is the vacuum permittivity.

That is, both electric currents (i.e. charges in uniform motion) and the (partial) time derivative of the electric field directly contributes to the magnetic field. In addition, the Maxwell–Faraday equation states

 
These represent two of Maxwell's four equations and they intricately link the electric and magnetic fields together, resulting in the electromagnetic field. The equations represent a set of four coupled multi-dimensional partial differential equations which, when solved for a system, describe the combined behavior of the electromagnetic fields. In general, the force experienced by a test charge in an electromagnetic field is given by the Lorentz force law:
 

Energy in the electric field

The total energy per unit volume stored by the electromagnetic field is[21]

 
where ε is the permittivity of the medium in which the field exists,   its magnetic permeability, and E and B are the electric and magnetic field vectors.

As E and B fields are coupled, it would be misleading to split this expression into "electric" and "magnetic" contributions. In particular, an electrostatic field in any given frame of reference in general transforms into a field with a magnetic component in a relatively moving frame. Accordingly, decomposing the electromagnetic field into an electric and magnetic component is frame-specific, and similarly for the associated energy.

The total energy UEM stored in the electromagnetic field in a given volume V is

 

The electric displacement field

Definitive equation of vector fields

In the presence of matter, it is helpful to extend the notion of the electric field into three vector fields:[22]

 
where P is the electric polarization – the volume density of electric dipole moments, and D is the electric displacement field. Since E and P are defined separately, this equation can be used to define D. The physical interpretation of D is not as clear as E (effectively the field applied to the material) or P (induced field due to the dipoles in the material), but still serves as a convenient mathematical simplification, since Maxwell's equations can be simplified in terms of free charges and currents.

Constitutive relation

The E and D fields are related by the permittivity of the material, ε.[23][22]

For linear, homogeneous, isotropic materials E and D are proportional and constant throughout the region, there is no position dependence:

 

For inhomogeneous materials, there is a position dependence throughout the material:[24]

 

For anisotropic materials the E and D fields are not parallel, and so E and D are related by the permittivity tensor (a 2nd order tensor field), in component form:

 

For non-linear media, E and D are not proportional. Materials can have varying extents of linearity, homogeneity and isotropy.

Relativistic Effects on electric field

Point charge in uniform motion

The invariance of the form of Maxwell's equations under Lorentz transformation can be used to derive the electric field of a uniformly moving point charge. The charge of a particle is considered frame invariant, as supported by experimental evidence.[25] Alternatively the electric field of uniformly moving point charges can be derived from the Lorentz transformation of four-force experienced by test charges in the source's rest frame given by Coulomb's law and assigning electric field and magnetic field by their definition given by the form of Lorentz force.[26] However the following equation is only applicable when no acceleration is involved in the particle's history where Coulomb's law can be considered or symmetry arguments can be used for solving Maxwell's equations in a simple manner. The electric field of such a uniformly moving point charge is hence given by:[27]

 
where   is the charge of the point source,   is the position vector from the point source to the point in space,   is the ratio of observed speed of the charge particle to the speed of light and   is the angle between   and the observed velocity of the charged particle.

The above equation reduces to that given by Coulomb's law for non-relativistic speeds of the point charge. Spherically symmetry is not satisfied due to breaking of symmetry in the problem by specification of direction of velocity for calculation of field. To illustrate this, field lines of moving charges are sometimes represented as unequally spaced radial lines which would appear equally spaced in a co-moving reference frame.[25]

Propagation of disturbances in electric fields

Special theory of relativity imposes the principle of locality, that requires cause and effect to be time-like separated events where the causal efficacy does not travel faster than the speed of light.[28] Maxwell's laws are found to confirm to this view since the general solutions of fields are given in terms of retarded time which indicate that electromagnetic disturbances travel at the speed of light. Advanced time, which also provides a solution for Maxwell's law are ignored as an unphysical solution.

 
An illustrative example showing bremsstrahlung radiation: Field lines and modulus of the electric field generated by a (negative) charge first moving at a constant speed and then stopping quickly to show the electromagnetic wave generated and propagation of disturbances in electromagnetic field.

For the motion of a charged particle, considering for example the case of a moving particle with the above described electric field coming to an abrupt stop, the electric fields at points far from it do not immediately revert to that classically given for a stationary charge. On stopping, the field around the stationary points begin to revert to the expected state and this effect propagates outwards at the speed of light while the electric field lines far away from this will continue to point radially towards an assumed moving charge. This virtual particle will never be outside the range of propagation of the disturbance in electromagnetic field, since charged particles are restricted to have speeds slower than that of light, which makes it impossible to construct a Gaussian surface in this region that violates Gauss' law. Another technical difficulty that supports this is that charged particles travelling faster than or equal to speed of light no longer have a unique retarded time. Since electric field lines are continuous, an electromagnetic pulse of radiation is generated that connects at the boundary of this disturbance travelling outwards at the speed of light.[29] In general, any accelerating point charge radiates electromagnetic waves however, non-radiating acceleration is possible in a systems of charges.

Arbitrarily moving point charge

For arbitrarily moving point charges, propagation of potential fields such as Lorenz gauge fields at the speed of light needs to be accounted for by using Liénard–Wiechert potential.[30] Since the potentials satisfy Maxwell's equations, the fields derived for point charge also satisfy Maxwell's equations. The electric field is expressed as:[31]

 
where   is the charge of the point source,   is retarded time or the time at which the source's contribution of the electric field originated,   is the position vector of the particle,   is a unit vector pointing from charged particle to the point in space,   is the velocity of the particle divided by the speed of light, and   is the corresponding Lorentz factor. The retarded time is given as solution of:

 

The uniqueness of solution for   for given  ,   and   is valid for charged particles moving slower than speed of light. Electromagnetic radiation of accelerating charges is known to be caused by the acceleration dependent term in the electric field from which relativistic correction for Larmor formula is obtained.[31]

There exist yet another set of solutions for Maxwell's equation of the same form but for advanced time   instead of retarded time given as a solution of:

 

Since the physical interpretation of this indicates that the electric field at a point is governed by the particle's state at a point of time in the future, it is considered as an unphysical solution and hence neglected. However, there have been theories exploring the advanced time solutions of Maxwell's equations, such as Feynman Wheeler absorber theory.

The above equation, although consistent with that of uniformly moving point charges as well as its non-relativistic limit, are not corrected for quantum-mechanical effects.

Some common electric field values

  • Infinite wire having uniform charge density   has electric field at a distance   from it as  
  • Infinitely large surface having charge density   has electric field at a distance   from it as  
  • Infinitely long cylinder having Uniform charge density   that is charge contained along unit length of the cylinder has electric field at a distance   from it as   while it is   everywhere inside the cylinder
  • Uniformly charged non-conducting sphere of radius  , volume charge density   and total charge   has electric field at a distance   from it as   while the electric field at a point   inside sphere from its center is given by  
  • Uniformly charged conducting sphere of radius  , surface charge density   and total charge   has electric field at a distance   from it as   while the electric field inside is  
  • Electric field infinitely close to a conducting surface in electrostatic equilibrium having charge density   at that point is  
  • Uniformly charged ring having total charge   has electric field at a distance   along its axis as  '
  • Uniformly charged disc of radius   and charge density   has electric field at a distance   along its axis from it as  
  • Electric field due to dipole of dipole moment   at a distance   from their center along equatorial plane is given as   and the same along the axial line is approximated to   for   much bigger than the distance between dipoles. Further generalization is given by multipole expansion.

See also

References

  1. ^ Roche, John (2016). "Introducing electric fields". Physics Education. 51 (5): 055005. Bibcode:2016PhyEd..51e5005R. doi:10.1088/0031-9120/51/5/055005. S2CID 125014664.
  2. ^ Browne, p 225: "... around every charge there is an aura that fills all space. This aura is the electric field due to the charge. The electric field is a vector field... and has a magnitude and direction."
  3. ^ Purcell, Edward M.; Morin, David J. (2013). Electricity and Magnetism (3rd ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–20. ISBN 978-1-107-01402-2.
  4. ^ Feynman, Richard (1970). The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol II. Addison Wesley Longman. pp. 1–3, 1–4. ISBN 978-0-201-02115-8.
  5. ^ Purcell, Edward M.; Morin, David J. (2013). Electricity and Magnetism (3rd ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-1-107-01402-2.
  6. ^ a b c Serway, Raymond A.; Vuille, Chris (2014). College Physics (10th ed.). Cengage Learning. pp. 532–533. ISBN 978-1305142824.
  7. ^ Le Système international d’unités [The International System of Units] (PDF) (in French and English) (9th ed.), International Bureau of Weights and Measures, 2019, ISBN 978-92-822-2272-0, p. 23
  8. ^ a b c Sears, Francis; et al. (1982), University Physics (6th ed.), Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-201-07199-1
  9. ^ Umashankar, Korada (1989), Introduction to Engineering Electromagnetic Fields, World Scientific, pp. 77–79, ISBN 9971-5-0921-0
  10. ^ a b Morely & Hughes (1970), Principles of Electricity (5th ed.), p. 73, ISBN 0-582-42629-4
  11. ^ Tou, Stephen (2011). Visualization of Fields and Applications in Engineering. John Wiley and Sons. p. 64. ISBN 9780470978467.
  12. ^ a b c Griffiths, David J. (1999). Introduction to electrodynamics (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-805326-X. OCLC 40251748.
  13. ^ Purcell, p 25: "Gauss's Law: the flux of the electric field E through any closed surface ... equals 1/e times the total charge enclosed by the surface."
  14. ^ Purcell, p 356: "Faraday's Law of Induction."
  15. ^ Purcell, p7: "... the interaction between electric charges at rest is described by Coulomb's Law: two stationary electric charges repel or attract each other with a force proportional to the product of the magnitude of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
  16. ^ Purcell, Edward (2011). Electricity and Magnetism (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-1139503556.
  17. ^ gwrowe (8 October 2011). (PDF). physicspages.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2019. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  18. ^ Huray, Paul G. (2009). Maxwell's Equations. Wiley-IEEE. p. 205. ISBN 978-0-470-54276-7.
  19. ^ Purcell, pp. 5-7.
  20. ^ Salam, Abdus (16 December 1976). "Quarks and leptons come out to play". New Scientist. 72: 652.
  21. ^ Griffiths, D.J. Introduction to Electrodynamics (3 ed.). Pearson Education. ISBN 9788177582932.
  22. ^ a b Grant, I.S.; Phillips, W.R. (2008). Electromagnetism (2 ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-92712-9.
  23. ^ Bennet, G.A.G.; Arnold, Edward (1974). Electricity and Modern Physics (2 ed.). ISBN 0-7131-2459-8.
  24. ^ Landau, Lev Davidovich; Lifshitz, Evgeny M. (1963). "68 the propagation of waves in an inhomogeneous medium". Electrodynamics of Continuous Media. Course of Theoretical Physics. Vol. 8. Pergamon. p. 285. ISBN 978-0-7581-6499-5. In Maxwell's equations… ε is a function of the co-ordinates.
  25. ^ a b Purcell, Edward M.; Morin, David J. (2013-01-21). Electricity and Magnetism. Higher Education from Cambridge University Press. pp. 241–251. doi:10.1017/cbo9781139012973. ISBN 9781139012973. Retrieved 2022-07-04.
  26. ^ Rosser, W. G. V. (1968). Classical Electromagnetism via Relativity. pp. 29–42. doi:10.1007/978-1-4899-6559-2. ISBN 978-1-4899-6258-4.
  27. ^ Heaviside, Oliver. Electromagnetic waves, the propagation of potential, and the electromagnetic effects of a moving charge.
  28. ^ Naber, Gregory L. (2012). The Geometry of Minkowski spacetime: an introduction to the mathematics of the special theory of relativity. Springer. pp. 4–5. ISBN 978-1-4419-7837-0. OCLC 804823303.
  29. ^ Purcell, Edward M.; David J. Morin (2013). Electricity and Magnetism (Third ed.). Cambridge. pp. 251–255. ISBN 978-1-139-01297-3. OCLC 1105718330.
  30. ^ Griffiths, David J. (2017). Introduction to electrodynamics (4th ed.). United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 454. ISBN 978-1-108-42041-9. OCLC 1021068059.
  31. ^ a b Jackson, John David (1999). Classical electrodynamics (3rd ed.). New York: Wiley. pp. 664–665. ISBN 0-471-30932-X. OCLC 38073290.
  • Purcell, Edward; Morin, David (2013). Electricity and Magnetism (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press, New York. ISBN 978-1-107-01402-2.
  • Browne, Michael (2011). Physics for Engineering and Science (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill, Schaum, New York. ISBN 978-0-07-161399-6.

External links

electric, field, redirects, here, australian, band, electric, fields, electric, field, sometimes, field, physical, field, that, surrounds, electrically, charged, particles, exerts, force, other, charged, particles, field, either, attracting, repelling, them, a. Electric fields redirects here For the Australian band see Electric Fields An electric field sometimes E field 1 is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field either attracting or repelling them 2 It also refers to the physical field for a system of charged particles 3 Electric fields originate from electric charges and time varying electric currents Electric fields and magnetic fields are both manifestations of the electromagnetic field one of the four fundamental interactions also called forces of nature Electric fieldEffects of an electric field The girl is touching an electrostatic generator which charges her body with a high voltage Her hair which is charged with the same polarity is repelled by the electric field of her head and stands out from her head Common symbolsESI unitvolt per meter V m In SI base unitsm kg s 3 A 1Electric fields are important in many areas of physics and are exploited in electrical technology In atomic physics and chemistry for instance the electric field is the attractive force holding the atomic nucleus and electrons together in atoms It is also the force responsible for chemical bonding between atoms that result in molecules The electric field is defined as a vector field that associates to each point in space the electrostatic Coulomb force per unit of charge exerted on an infinitesimal positive test charge at rest at that point 4 5 6 The derived SI unit for the electric field is the volt per meter V m which is equal to the newton per coulomb N C 7 Contents 1 Description 2 Mathematical formulation 2 1 Electrostatics 2 2 Superposition principle 2 3 Continuous charge distributions 2 4 Electric potential 2 5 Continuous vs discrete charge representation 3 Electrostatic fields 3 1 Parallels between electrostatic and gravitational fields 3 2 Uniform fields 4 Electrodynamic fields 5 Energy in the electric field 6 The electric displacement field 6 1 Definitive equation of vector fields 6 2 Constitutive relation 7 Relativistic Effects on electric field 7 1 Point charge in uniform motion 7 2 Propagation of disturbances in electric fields 7 3 Arbitrarily moving point charge 8 Some common electric field values 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksDescription Edit Electric field of a positive point electric charge suspended over an infinite sheet of conducting material The field is depicted by electric field lines lines which follow the direction of the electric field in space The electric field is defined at each point in space as the force per unit charge that would be experienced by a vanishingly small positive test charge if held stationary at that point 8 469 70 As the electric field is defined in terms of force and force is a vector i e having both magnitude and direction it follows that an electric field is a vector field 8 469 70 Fields that may be defined in this manner are sometimes referred to as force fields The electric field acts between two charges similarly to the way the gravitational field acts between two masses as they both obey an inverse square law with distance 9 This is the basis for Coulomb s law which states that for stationary charges the electric field varies with the source charge and varies inversely with the square of the distance from the source This means that if the source charge were doubled the electric field would double and if you move twice as far away from the source the field at that point would be only one quarter its original strength The electric field can be visualized with a set of lines whose direction at each point is the same as the field s a concept introduced by Michael Faraday 10 whose term lines of force is still sometimes used This illustration has the useful property that the field s strength is proportional to the density of the lines 11 Field lines due to stationary charges have several important properties including always originating from positive charges and terminating at negative charges they enter all good conductors at right angles and they never cross or close in on themselves 8 479 The field lines are a representative concept the field actually permeates all the intervening space between the lines More or fewer lines may be drawn depending on the precision to which it is desired to represent the field 10 The study of electric fields created by stationary charges is called electrostatics Faraday s law describes the relationship between a time varying magnetic field and the electric field One way of stating Faraday s law is that the curl of the electric field is equal to the negative time derivative of the magnetic field 12 327 In the absence of time varying magnetic field the electric field is therefore called conservative i e curl free 12 24 90 91 This implies there are two kinds of electric fields electrostatic fields and fields arising from time varying magnetic fields 12 305 307 While the curl free nature of the static electric field allows for a simpler treatment using electrostatics time varying magnetic fields are generally treated as a component of a unified electromagnetic field The study of time varying magnetic and electric fields is called electrodynamics Mathematical formulation EditMain article Mathematical descriptions of the electromagnetic field Electric fields are caused by electric charges described by Gauss s law 13 and time varying magnetic fields described by Faraday s law of induction 14 Together these laws are enough to define the behavior of the electric field However since the magnetic field is described as a function of electric field the equations of both fields are coupled and together form Maxwell s equations that describe both fields as a function of charges and currents Evidence of an electric field styrofoam peanuts clinging to a cat s fur due to static electricity The triboelectric effect causes an electrostatic charge to build up on the fur due to the cat s motions The electric field of the charge causes polarization of the molecules of the styrofoam due to electrostatic induction resulting in a slight attraction of the light plastic pieces to the charged fur This effect is also the cause of static cling in clothes Electrostatics Edit Main article Coulomb s law In the special case of a steady state stationary charges and currents the Maxwell Faraday inductive effect disappears The resulting two equations Gauss s law E r e 0 displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf E frac rho varepsilon 0 and Faraday s law with no induction term E 0 displaystyle nabla times mathbf E 0 taken together are equivalent to Coulomb s law which states that a particle with electric charge q 1 displaystyle q 1 at position x 1 displaystyle mathbf x 1 exerts a force on a particle with charge q 0 displaystyle q 0 at position x 0 displaystyle mathbf x 0 of 15 F 1 4 p e 0 q 1 q 0 x 1 x 0 2 r 1 0 displaystyle mathbf F frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 frac q 1 q 0 mathbf x 1 mathbf x 0 2 hat mathbf r 1 0 where r 1 0 displaystyle hat mathbf r 1 0 is the unit vector in the direction from point x 1 displaystyle mathbf x 1 to point x 0 displaystyle mathbf x 0 and e0 is the electric constant also known as the absolute permittivity of free space with the unit C2 m 2 N 1 Note that e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 the vacuum electric permittivity must be substituted with e displaystyle varepsilon permittivity when charges are in non empty media When the charges q 0 displaystyle q 0 and q 1 displaystyle q 1 have the same sign this force is positive directed away from the other charge indicating the particles repel each other When the charges have unlike signs the force is negative indicating the particles attract To make it easy to calculate the Coulomb force on any charge at position x 0 displaystyle mathbf x 0 this expression can be divided by q 0 displaystyle q 0 leaving an expression that only depends on the other charge the source charge 16 6 E x 0 F q 0 1 4 p e 0 q 1 x 1 x 0 2 r 1 0 displaystyle mathbf E mathbf x 0 frac mathbf F q 0 frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 frac q 1 mathbf x 1 mathbf x 0 2 hat mathbf r 1 0 This is the electric field at point x 0 displaystyle mathbf x 0 due to the point charge q 1 displaystyle q 1 it is a vector valued function equal to the Coulomb force per unit charge that a positive point charge would experience at the position x 0 displaystyle mathbf x 0 Since this formula gives the electric field magnitude and direction at any point x 0 displaystyle mathbf x 0 in space except at the location of the charge itself x 1 displaystyle mathbf x 1 where it becomes infinite it defines a vector field From the above formula it can be seen that the electric field due to a point charge is everywhere directed away from the charge if it is positive and toward the charge if it is negative and its magnitude decreases with the inverse square of the distance from the charge The Coulomb force on a charge of magnitude q displaystyle q at any point in space is equal to the product of the charge and the electric field at that pointF q E displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E The SI unit of the electric field is the newton per coulomb N C or volt per meter V m in terms of the SI base units it is kg m s 3 A 1 Superposition principle Edit Due to the linearity of Maxwell s equations electric fields satisfy the superposition principle which states that the total electric field at a point due to a collection of charges is equal to the vector sum of the electric fields at that point due to the individual charges 6 This principle is useful in calculating the field created by multiple point charges If charges q 1 q 2 q n displaystyle q 1 q 2 dots q n are stationary in space at points x 1 x 2 x n displaystyle mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 dots mathbf x n in the absence of currents the superposition principle says that the resulting field is the sum of fields generated by each particle as described by Coulomb s law E x E 1 x E 2 x E 3 x 1 4 p e 0 q 1 x 1 x 2 r 1 1 4 p e 0 q 2 x 2 x 2 r 2 1 4 p e 0 q 3 x 3 x 2 r 3 1 4 p e 0 k 1 N q k x k x 2 r k displaystyle begin aligned mathbf E mathbf x amp mathbf E 1 mathbf x mathbf E 2 mathbf x mathbf E 3 mathbf x cdots 2pt amp 1 over 4 pi varepsilon 0 q 1 over mathbf x 1 mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r 1 1 over 4 pi varepsilon 0 q 2 over mathbf x 2 mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r 2 1 over 4 pi varepsilon 0 q 3 over mathbf x 3 mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r 3 cdots 2pt amp 1 over 4 pi varepsilon 0 sum k 1 N q k over mathbf x k mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r k end aligned where r k displaystyle mathbf hat r k is the unit vector in the direction from point x k displaystyle mathbf x k to point x displaystyle mathbf x Continuous charge distributions Edit The superposition principle allows for the calculation of the electric field due to a continuous distribution of charge r x displaystyle rho mathbf x where r displaystyle rho is the charge density in coulombs per cubic meter By considering the charge r x d V displaystyle rho mathbf x dV in each small volume of space d V displaystyle dV at point x displaystyle mathbf x as a point charge the resulting electric field d E x displaystyle d mathbf E mathbf x at point x displaystyle mathbf x can be calculated asd E x 1 4 p e 0 r x d V x x 2 r displaystyle d mathbf E mathbf x frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 frac rho mathbf x dV mathbf x mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r where r displaystyle hat mathbf r is the unit vector pointing from x displaystyle mathbf x to x displaystyle mathbf x The total field is then found by adding up the contributions from all the increments of volume by integrating over the volume of the charge distribution V displaystyle V E x 1 4 p e 0 V r x d V x x 2 r displaystyle mathbf E mathbf x frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 iiint V rho mathbf x dV over mathbf x mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r Similar equations follow for a surface charge with continuous charge distribution s x displaystyle sigma mathbf x where s displaystyle sigma is the charge density in coulombs per square meter E x 1 4 p e 0 S s x d A x x 2 r displaystyle mathbf E mathbf x frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 iint S sigma mathbf x dA over mathbf x mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r and for line charges with continuous charge distribution l x displaystyle lambda mathbf x where l displaystyle lambda is the charge density in coulombs per meter E x 1 4 p e 0 P l x d L x x 2 r displaystyle mathbf E mathbf x frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 int P lambda mathbf x dL over mathbf x mathbf x 2 hat mathbf r Electric potential Edit Main article Electric potential See also Helmholtz decomposition and Conservative vector field Irrotational vector fields If a system is static such that magnetic fields are not time varying then by Faraday s law the electric field is curl free In this case one can define an electric potential that is a function F displaystyle Phi such that E F displaystyle mathbf E nabla Phi 17 This is analogous to the gravitational potential The difference between the electric potential at two points in space is called the potential difference or voltage between the two points In general however the electric field cannot be described independently of the magnetic field Given the magnetic vector potential A defined so that B A displaystyle mathbf B nabla times mathbf A one can still define an electric potential F displaystyle Phi such that E F A t displaystyle mathbf E nabla Phi frac partial mathbf A partial t where F displaystyle nabla Phi is the gradient of the electric potential and A t displaystyle frac partial mathbf A partial t is the partial derivative of A with respect to time Faraday s law of induction can be recovered by taking the curl of that equation 18 E A t B t displaystyle nabla times mathbf E frac partial nabla times mathbf A partial t frac partial mathbf B partial t which justifies a posteriori the previous form for E Continuous vs discrete charge representation Edit Main article Charge density The equations of electromagnetism are best described in a continuous description However charges are sometimes best described as discrete points for example some models may describe electrons as point sources where charge density is infinite on an infinitesimal section of space A charge q displaystyle q located at r 0 displaystyle mathbf r 0 can be described mathematically as a charge density r r q d r r 0 displaystyle rho mathbf r q delta mathbf r mathbf r 0 where the Dirac delta function in three dimensions is used Conversely a charge distribution can be approximated by many small point charges Electrostatic fields EditMain article Electrostatics Illustration of the electric field surrounding a positive red and a negative blue charge Electrostatic fields are electric fields that do not change with time Such fields are present when systems of charged matter are stationary or when electric currents are unchanging In that case Coulomb s law fully describes the field 19 Parallels between electrostatic and gravitational fields Edit Coulomb s law which describes the interaction of electric charges F q Q 4 p e 0 r r 2 q E displaystyle mathbf F q left frac Q 4 pi varepsilon 0 frac mathbf hat r mathbf r 2 right q mathbf E is similar to Newton s law of universal gravitation F m G M r r 2 m g displaystyle mathbf F m left GM frac mathbf hat r mathbf r 2 right m mathbf g where r r r textstyle mathbf hat r mathbf frac r r This suggests similarities between the electric field E and the gravitational field g or their associated potentials Mass is sometimes called gravitational charge 20 Electrostatic and gravitational forces both are central conservative and obey an inverse square law Uniform fields Edit Illustration of the electric field between two parallel conductive plates of finite size known as a parallel plate capacitor In the middle of the plates far from any edges the electric field is very nearly uniform A uniform field is one in which the electric field is constant at every point It can be approximated by placing two conducting plates parallel to each other and maintaining a voltage potential difference between them it is only an approximation because of boundary effects near the edge of the planes electric field is distorted because the plane does not continue Assuming infinite planes the magnitude of the electric field E is E D V d displaystyle E frac Delta V d where DV is the potential difference between the plates and d is the distance separating the plates The negative sign arises as positive charges repel so a positive charge will experience a force away from the positively charged plate in the opposite direction to that in which the voltage increases In micro and nano applications for instance in relation to semiconductors a typical magnitude of an electric field is in the order of 106 V m 1 achieved by applying a voltage of the order of 1 volt between conductors spaced 1 µm apart Electrodynamic fields Edit The electric field lines with arrows of a charge induces surface charges red and blue areas on metal objects due to electrostatic induction Main article Lorentz force See also Electrodynamics and Electromagnetic field Electrodynamic fields are electric fields which do change with time for instance when charges are in motion In this case a magnetic field is produced in accordance with Ampere s circuital law with Maxwell s addition which along with Maxwell s other equations defines the magnetic field B displaystyle mathbf B in terms of its curl B m 0 J e 0 E t displaystyle nabla times mathbf B mu 0 left mathbf J varepsilon 0 frac partial mathbf E partial t right where J displaystyle mathbf J is the current density m 0 displaystyle mu 0 is the vacuum permeability and e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 is the vacuum permittivity That is both electric currents i e charges in uniform motion and the partial time derivative of the electric field directly contributes to the magnetic field In addition the Maxwell Faraday equation states E B t displaystyle nabla times mathbf E frac partial mathbf B partial t These represent two of Maxwell s four equations and they intricately link the electric and magnetic fields together resulting in the electromagnetic field The equations represent a set of four coupled multi dimensional partial differential equations which when solved for a system describe the combined behavior of the electromagnetic fields In general the force experienced by a test charge in an electromagnetic field is given by the Lorentz force law F q E q v B displaystyle mathbf F q mathbf E q mathbf v times mathbf B Energy in the electric field EditThe total energy per unit volume stored by the electromagnetic field is 21 u EM e 2 E 2 1 2 m B 2 displaystyle u text EM frac varepsilon 2 mathbf E 2 frac 1 2 mu mathbf B 2 where e is the permittivity of the medium in which the field exists m displaystyle mu its magnetic permeability and E and B are the electric and magnetic field vectors As E and B fields are coupled it would be misleading to split this expression into electric and magnetic contributions In particular an electrostatic field in any given frame of reference in general transforms into a field with a magnetic component in a relatively moving frame Accordingly decomposing the electromagnetic field into an electric and magnetic component is frame specific and similarly for the associated energy The total energy UEM stored in the electromagnetic field in a given volume V isU EM 1 2 V e E 2 1 m B 2 d V displaystyle U text EM frac 1 2 int V left varepsilon mathbf E 2 frac 1 mu mathbf B 2 right dV The electric displacement field EditMain article electric displacement field Definitive equation of vector fields Edit See also Defining equation physics and List of electromagnetism equations In the presence of matter it is helpful to extend the notion of the electric field into three vector fields 22 D e 0 E P displaystyle mathbf D varepsilon 0 mathbf E mathbf P where P is the electric polarization the volume density of electric dipole moments and D is the electric displacement field Since E and P are defined separately this equation can be used to define D The physical interpretation of D is not as clear as E effectively the field applied to the material or P induced field due to the dipoles in the material but still serves as a convenient mathematical simplification since Maxwell s equations can be simplified in terms of free charges and currents Constitutive relation Edit Main article Constitutive equation The E and D fields are related by the permittivity of the material e 23 22 For linear homogeneous isotropic materials E and D are proportional and constant throughout the region there is no position dependence D r e E r displaystyle mathbf D mathbf r varepsilon mathbf E mathbf r For inhomogeneous materials there is a position dependence throughout the material 24 D r e r E r displaystyle mathbf D mathbf r varepsilon mathbf r mathbf E mathbf r For anisotropic materials the E and D fields are not parallel and so E and D are related by the permittivity tensor a 2nd order tensor field in component form D i e i j E j displaystyle D i varepsilon ij E j For non linear media E and D are not proportional Materials can have varying extents of linearity homogeneity and isotropy Relativistic Effects on electric field EditPoint charge in uniform motion Edit The invariance of the form of Maxwell s equations under Lorentz transformation can be used to derive the electric field of a uniformly moving point charge The charge of a particle is considered frame invariant as supported by experimental evidence 25 Alternatively the electric field of uniformly moving point charges can be derived from the Lorentz transformation of four force experienced by test charges in the source s rest frame given by Coulomb s law and assigning electric field and magnetic field by their definition given by the form of Lorentz force 26 However the following equation is only applicable when no acceleration is involved in the particle s history where Coulomb s law can be considered or symmetry arguments can be used for solving Maxwell s equations in a simple manner The electric field of such a uniformly moving point charge is hence given by 27 E q 4 p ϵ 0 r 3 1 b 2 1 b 2 sin 2 8 3 2 r displaystyle mathbf E frac q 4 pi epsilon 0 r 3 frac 1 beta 2 1 beta 2 sin 2 theta 3 2 mathbf r where q displaystyle q is the charge of the point source r displaystyle mathbf r is the position vector from the point source to the point in space b displaystyle beta is the ratio of observed speed of the charge particle to the speed of light and 8 displaystyle theta is the angle between r displaystyle mathbf r and the observed velocity of the charged particle The above equation reduces to that given by Coulomb s law for non relativistic speeds of the point charge Spherically symmetry is not satisfied due to breaking of symmetry in the problem by specification of direction of velocity for calculation of field To illustrate this field lines of moving charges are sometimes represented as unequally spaced radial lines which would appear equally spaced in a co moving reference frame 25 Propagation of disturbances in electric fields Edit See also Paradox of radiation of charged particles in a gravitational field Special theory of relativity imposes the principle of locality that requires cause and effect to be time like separated events where the causal efficacy does not travel faster than the speed of light 28 Maxwell s laws are found to confirm to this view since the general solutions of fields are given in terms of retarded time which indicate that electromagnetic disturbances travel at the speed of light Advanced time which also provides a solution for Maxwell s law are ignored as an unphysical solution An illustrative example showing bremsstrahlung radiation Field lines and modulus of the electric field generated by a negative charge first moving at a constant speed and then stopping quickly to show the electromagnetic wave generated and propagation of disturbances in electromagnetic field For the motion of a charged particle considering for example the case of a moving particle with the above described electric field coming to an abrupt stop the electric fields at points far from it do not immediately revert to that classically given for a stationary charge On stopping the field around the stationary points begin to revert to the expected state and this effect propagates outwards at the speed of light while the electric field lines far away from this will continue to point radially towards an assumed moving charge This virtual particle will never be outside the range of propagation of the disturbance in electromagnetic field since charged particles are restricted to have speeds slower than that of light which makes it impossible to construct a Gaussian surface in this region that violates Gauss law Another technical difficulty that supports this is that charged particles travelling faster than or equal to speed of light no longer have a unique retarded time Since electric field lines are continuous an electromagnetic pulse of radiation is generated that connects at the boundary of this disturbance travelling outwards at the speed of light 29 In general any accelerating point charge radiates electromagnetic waves however non radiating acceleration is possible in a systems of charges Arbitrarily moving point charge Edit See also Jefimenko s equations Heaviside Feynman formula For arbitrarily moving point charges propagation of potential fields such as Lorenz gauge fields at the speed of light needs to be accounted for by using Lienard Wiechert potential 30 Since the potentials satisfy Maxwell s equations the fields derived for point charge also satisfy Maxwell s equations The electric field is expressed as 31 E r t 1 4 p e 0 q n s b s g 2 1 n s b s 3 r r s 2 q n s n s b s b s c 1 n s b s 3 r r s t t r displaystyle mathbf E mathbf r mathbf t frac 1 4 pi varepsilon 0 left frac q mathbf n s boldsymbol beta s gamma 2 1 mathbf n s cdot boldsymbol beta s 3 mathbf r mathbf r s 2 frac q mathbf n s times big mathbf n s boldsymbol beta s times dot boldsymbol beta s big c 1 mathbf n s cdot boldsymbol beta s 3 mathbf r mathbf r s right t t r where q displaystyle q is the charge of the point source t r textstyle t r is retarded time or the time at which the source s contribution of the electric field originated r s t textstyle r s t is the position vector of the particle n s r t textstyle n s mathbf r t is a unit vector pointing from charged particle to the point in space b s t textstyle boldsymbol beta s t is the velocity of the particle divided by the speed of light and g t textstyle gamma t is the corresponding Lorentz factor The retarded time is given as solution of t r t r r s t r c displaystyle t r mathbf t frac mathbf r mathbf r s t r c The uniqueness of solution for t r textstyle t r for given t displaystyle mathbf t r displaystyle mathbf r and r s t displaystyle r s t is valid for charged particles moving slower than speed of light Electromagnetic radiation of accelerating charges is known to be caused by the acceleration dependent term in the electric field from which relativistic correction for Larmor formula is obtained 31 There exist yet another set of solutions for Maxwell s equation of the same form but for advanced time t a textstyle t a instead of retarded time given as a solution of t a t r r s t a c displaystyle t a mathbf t frac mathbf r mathbf r s t a c Since the physical interpretation of this indicates that the electric field at a point is governed by the particle s state at a point of time in the future it is considered as an unphysical solution and hence neglected However there have been theories exploring the advanced time solutions of Maxwell s equations such as Feynman Wheeler absorber theory The above equation although consistent with that of uniformly moving point charges as well as its non relativistic limit are not corrected for quantum mechanical effects Some common electric field values EditInfinite wire having uniform charge density l displaystyle lambda has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x from it as 2 K l x x displaystyle frac 2K lambda x hat x Infinitely large surface having charge density s displaystyle sigma has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x from it as s 2 ϵ 0 x displaystyle frac sigma 2 epsilon 0 hat x Infinitely long cylinder having Uniform charge density l displaystyle lambda that is charge contained along unit length of the cylinder has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x from it as 2 K l x x displaystyle frac 2K lambda x hat x while it is 0 displaystyle 0 everywhere inside the cylinder Uniformly charged non conducting sphere of radius R displaystyle R volume charge density r displaystyle rho and total charge Q displaystyle Q has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x from it as K Q x 2 x displaystyle frac KQ x 2 hat x while the electric field at a point r displaystyle vec r inside sphere from its center is given by K Q R 3 r displaystyle frac KQ R 3 vec r Uniformly charged conducting sphere of radius R displaystyle R surface charge density s displaystyle sigma and total charge Q displaystyle Q has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x from it as K Q x 2 x displaystyle frac KQ x 2 hat x while the electric field inside is 0 displaystyle 0 Electric field infinitely close to a conducting surface in electrostatic equilibrium having charge density s displaystyle sigma at that point is s ϵ 0 x displaystyle frac sigma epsilon 0 hat x Uniformly charged ring having total charge Q displaystyle Q has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x along its axis as K Q x R 2 x 2 3 2 x displaystyle frac KQx R 2 x 2 3 2 hat x Uniformly charged disc of radius R displaystyle R and charge density s displaystyle sigma has electric field at a distance x displaystyle x along its axis from it as s 2 ϵ 0 1 R 2 x 2 1 1 2 x displaystyle frac sigma 2 epsilon 0 left 1 left frac R 2 x 2 1 right 1 2 right hat x Electric field due to dipole of dipole moment p displaystyle vec p at a distance x displaystyle x from their center along equatorial plane is given as K p x 3 displaystyle frac K vec p x 3 and the same along the axial line is approximated to 2 K p x 3 displaystyle frac 2K vec p x 3 for x displaystyle x much bigger than the distance between dipoles Further generalization is given by multipole expansion See also EditClassical electromagnetism Relativistic electromagnetism Electricity History of electromagnetic theory Optical field Magnetism Teltron tube Teledeltos a conductive paper that may be used as a simple analog computer for modelling fieldsReferences Edit Roche John 2016 Introducing electric fields Physics Education 51 5 055005 Bibcode 2016PhyEd 51e5005R doi 10 1088 0031 9120 51 5 055005 S2CID 125014664 Browne p 225 around every charge there is an aura that fills all space This aura is the electric field due to the charge The electric field is a vector field and has a magnitude and direction Purcell Edward M Morin David J 2013 Electricity and Magnetism 3rd ed New York Cambridge University Press pp 16 20 ISBN 978 1 107 01402 2 Feynman Richard 1970 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol II Addison Wesley Longman pp 1 3 1 4 ISBN 978 0 201 02115 8 Purcell Edward M Morin David J 2013 Electricity and Magnetism 3rd ed New York Cambridge University Press pp 15 16 ISBN 978 1 107 01402 2 a b c Serway Raymond A Vuille Chris 2014 College Physics 10th ed Cengage Learning pp 532 533 ISBN 978 1305142824 Le Systeme international d unites The International System of Units PDF in French and English 9th ed International Bureau of Weights and Measures 2019 ISBN 978 92 822 2272 0 p 23 a b c Sears Francis et al 1982 University Physics 6th ed Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 07199 1 Umashankar Korada 1989 Introduction to Engineering Electromagnetic Fields World Scientific pp 77 79 ISBN 9971 5 0921 0 a b Morely amp Hughes 1970 Principles of Electricity 5th ed p 73 ISBN 0 582 42629 4 Tou Stephen 2011 Visualization of Fields and Applications in Engineering John Wiley and Sons p 64 ISBN 9780470978467 a b c Griffiths David J 1999 Introduction to electrodynamics 3rd ed Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 805326 X OCLC 40251748 Purcell p 25 Gauss s Law the flux of the electric field E through any closed surface equals 1 e times the total charge enclosed by the surface Purcell p 356 Faraday s Law of Induction Purcell p7 the interaction between electric charges at rest is described by Coulomb s Law two stationary electric charges repel or attract each other with a force proportional to the product of the magnitude of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them Purcell Edward 2011 Electricity and Magnetism 2nd ed Cambridge University Press pp 8 9 ISBN 978 1139503556 gwrowe 8 October 2011 Curl amp Potential in Electrostatics PDF physicspages com Archived from the original PDF on 22 March 2019 Retrieved 2 November 2020 Huray Paul G 2009 Maxwell s Equations Wiley IEEE p 205 ISBN 978 0 470 54276 7 Purcell pp 5 7 Salam Abdus 16 December 1976 Quarks and leptons come out to play New Scientist 72 652 Griffiths D J Introduction to Electrodynamics 3 ed Pearson Education ISBN 9788177582932 a b Grant I S Phillips W R 2008 Electromagnetism 2 ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 92712 9 Bennet G A G Arnold Edward 1974 Electricity and Modern Physics 2 ed ISBN 0 7131 2459 8 Landau Lev Davidovich Lifshitz Evgeny M 1963 68 the propagation of waves in an inhomogeneous medium Electrodynamics of Continuous Media Course of Theoretical Physics Vol 8 Pergamon p 285 ISBN 978 0 7581 6499 5 In Maxwell s equations e is a function of the co ordinates a b Purcell Edward M Morin David J 2013 01 21 Electricity and Magnetism Higher Education from Cambridge University Press pp 241 251 doi 10 1017 cbo9781139012973 ISBN 9781139012973 Retrieved 2022 07 04 Rosser W G V 1968 Classical Electromagnetism via Relativity pp 29 42 doi 10 1007 978 1 4899 6559 2 ISBN 978 1 4899 6258 4 Heaviside Oliver Electromagnetic waves the propagation of potential and the electromagnetic effects of a moving charge Naber Gregory L 2012 The Geometry of Minkowski spacetime an introduction to the mathematics of the special theory of relativity Springer pp 4 5 ISBN 978 1 4419 7837 0 OCLC 804823303 Purcell Edward M David J Morin 2013 Electricity and Magnetism Third ed Cambridge pp 251 255 ISBN 978 1 139 01297 3 OCLC 1105718330 Griffiths David J 2017 Introduction to electrodynamics 4th ed United Kingdom Cambridge University Press p 454 ISBN 978 1 108 42041 9 OCLC 1021068059 a b Jackson John David 1999 Classical electrodynamics 3rd ed New York Wiley pp 664 665 ISBN 0 471 30932 X OCLC 38073290 Purcell Edward Morin David 2013 Electricity and Magnetism 3rd ed Cambridge University Press New York ISBN 978 1 107 01402 2 Browne Michael 2011 Physics for Engineering and Science 2nd ed McGraw Hill Schaum New York ISBN 978 0 07 161399 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Electric field Electric field in Electricity and Magnetism R Nave Hyperphysics Georgia State University Frank Wolfs s lectures at University of Rochester chapters 23 and 24 Fields a chapter from an online textbook Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Electric field amp oldid 1138009556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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