About the electric field of a dipole

AI Thread Summary
A dipole does not have a point where the electric field is zero, except at infinity, as any point along the line joining the charges will be closer to one charge than the other. The electric field from a dipole decreases with distance, and at very large distances, it behaves similarly to a single point charge if the charges are unequal. However, the example given of a +3 and -1 charge does not represent a dipole due to the unequal magnitudes. The concept of dipole moment is relevant in understanding the behavior of dipoles in electric fields. Understanding these principles is crucial for applications in electrostatics and molecular chemistry.
norap
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I would like to know that 1) Is there a point where the electric field is zero from a dipole?
2) If the point is very far away from a dipole, how is the electric
from the dipole? I mean, for example, if there is a charge +3 and
-1, these two charges will behave like a +2 point charges at large
distance.

Thank you in advance.
 
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Hi norap and welcome to PF.
norap said:
I would like to know that 1) Is there a point where the electric field is zero from a dipole?
Other than infinity, no. Just think about it. A dipole is two charges of equal size but opposite sign. If there is a point where the E-fied is zero, it should be on the line joining the charges. Any such point is going to be closer to one or the other charge. At the midpoint the electric fields from the individual charges add, they don't give zero.
2) If the point is very far away from a dipole, how is the electric
from the dipole? I mean, for example, if there is a charge +3 and
-1, these two charges will behave like a +2 point charges at large
distance.
[/QUOTE]
What you have described is not a dipole because the sizes of the charges are not the same, but yes, at very large distances this distribution will be like a +2 point charge at the origin.
 
Thank you very much, Karuman.
 
sorry, i mean kuruman. =)
 
norap said:
sorry, i mean kuruman. =)

No offense taken. People mangle my real name too, all the time. :smile:
 
whats is use of dipole moment?
advanced thanks.
 
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