Electric field and change in Voltage question

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating voltage differences in an electric field with a constant strength of 3650 N/C. The first question confirms that the potential difference between points A and B is zero due to the perpendicular displacement to the electric field. The second question calculates the potential difference between points B and C as 281.05V using the formula Delta V = E x -Delta S. The third question involves finding the potential difference between points C and A, where the relationship between points A, B, and C is clarified through algebraic substitution. The key takeaway is that only the displacement in the direction of the electric field affects potential differences, not the total distance.
StudentofPhysics
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Distances:
a =6.2 cm
b =7.7 cm
c =9.9 cm
E=3650 N/C

Question 1: What is VB - VA? (Between points A & B)I found this to equal 0 as the E field moves about the Y axis. This was correct.

Question 2: VC - VB? (between points B & C) I found this to be 281.05V using Delta V = E x -Delta S. This was also correct.

Question 3: VA - VC (between points C and A). I can not figure this out.

I'm assuming the pathagorian theorem comes into play, however if one of the sides = 0 for E, then the hypotenus would eqaul 3650.

What am I forgetting?
 
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Hint: Since VB - VA = 0, then VB = VA.
 
Doc Al said:
Hint: Since VB - VA = 0, then VB = VA.



I'm not seeing how that helps, sorry.
 
Wherever you see VA, you can replace it with VB. So, VA - VC is equivalent to what? (Then compare with question 2.)
 
Ahhh, I see. Thank you. I'm not entirely sure why that is correct, other than by algebra. Meaning, I get why it works through the transitive property, but if a force moving toward -y acts on a point B that is further away from point A, why the field strength would be equal and opposite.
 
StudentofPhysics said:
...but if a force moving toward -y acts on a point B that is further away from point A, why the field strength would be equal and opposite.
First of all, you are finding potential differences, not field strength: The field strength is given as a constant in the -y direction. In calculating potential differences between points, what matters is the displacement in the direction of the field, not merely the distance. After all, the distance between points A and B is 6.2 cm, but the potential difference is zero because the displacement is perpendicular to the field. Similarly, between C and A, and between C and B the potential difference is the same, since only the y-component of the displacement counts.
 
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