Determin the Electric Potential Difference

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on calculating the electric potential differences between points A, B, and C in a uniform electric field of 3000 N/C directed in the negative y direction. The first two parts of the problem were solved easily, but confusion arose regarding the angle of the triangle and how to incorporate both vertical and horizontal components for point C. It was clarified that moving horizontally from A to B requires no work, as there is no force in that direction, thus the potential difference remains zero. The potential difference from A to C can be calculated by considering the vertical component of the distance, as the electric force acts vertically. The conversation emphasizes understanding the relationship between electric potential, work, and the direction of the electric field.
kvarner83
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Homework Statement


The drawing shows a uniform electric field that points in the negative y direction; the magnitude of the field is 3000 N/C. Determine the electric potential difference (a) VB - VA between points A and B, (b) VC - VB between points B and C, and (c) VA - VC between points C and A.

http://edugen.wiley.com/edugen/courses/crs2216/art/qb/qu/c19/ch19p_56.gif

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution


I was able to solve the first two parts of this problem easily but I am hung up on how the angle of the triangle plays into this.
I know A is zero because they are on the same equipotential field.
B I solved by converting the distance to meters and multiplying that by the magnitude of the electric field.
For C I know that it will be a combination of both the vertical and horizontal direction and I know that I am supposed to find that by using sin or cos but I just can't seem to put it together!
 
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Looks good so far, Kvarner.
At the risk of boring you, I suggest going back to the definition of electric potential as the work per charge needed to move a charge through an electric field. When moving the charge horizontally from A to B, there is no force in the direction of movement so no work need be done. Like moving horizontally in a gravitational field. So, moving from A to C you could do A to B first with work, energy and potential difference zero. Then add the potential difference for the B to C move that you've already calculated. Hope this makes sense ...

Alternatively, going straight from A to B the electric force is purely vertical so the pd is the work/charge = F*d/q = q*E*d/q where only the vertical component of distance is used because that is the direction of the force. I suppose it should really be written as a dot product F•d.
 
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