Electrostatics: sign of the potential

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the sign of the electric potential in electrostatics, particularly in the context of line integrals of electric fields. Participants explore the implications of the sign convention used in defining electric potential, especially when dealing with radially oriented electric fields and their relationship to work done on charges. The scope includes theoretical considerations and mathematical reasoning related to electrostatics.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions why the integral for electric potential, given a positively oriented electric field, does not yield a positive result as expected, suggesting confusion over the sign convention.
  • Another participant explains that the negative sign in the potential definition arises from classical mechanics, where it is necessary for the total energy to be conserved as the sum of kinetic and potential energy.
  • A participant provides a mathematical derivation of the electric potential from the Coulomb field, emphasizing the symmetry of the problem and the choice of reference points for potential.
  • There is a discussion about the evaluation of the integral, with one participant clarifying that integrating from infinity to a point results in a negative integral, which aligns with expectations regarding potential differences.
  • Another participant reiterates the importance of the direction of the line element in relation to the electric field, noting that the inner product being negative leads to a negative integral when the field and displacement are antiparallel.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the interpretation of the sign in the potential integral, with some agreeing on the conventional definitions while others seek clarification on the implications of these conventions. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the specific conditions under which the signs of the integrals should be evaluated.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge that the evaluation of integrals depends on the chosen limits and the direction of the line element, which introduces complexity in understanding the sign of the potential. There are also references to the symmetry of the electric field and the choice of reference points for potential, which may not be universally agreed upon.

torito_verdejo
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The final result will only differ in its sign, but this is crucial. Having a positively, radially oriented electric field ##\textbf{E}##, I understand that the sign of the integral should be positive (## - (- A) = A##), but it is not! How and why is this the case? A line integral where the vector field is antiparallel to the displacement vector should be negative; is this negativity already taken into account by the conventional minus sign in ##V(\textbf{r})=-\int_\Lambda \textbf{E}\cdot d\textbf{l}##?

Thank you very much.
 
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It's a convention that conservative fields' potentials are defined with the - sign. It comes from classical mechanics, where you like to have the total (conserved) energy being the sum of the kinetic and potential energy.

As for your example. I guess you think about the Coulomb field. You know that
$$\vec{E}(\vec{x})=\frac{q}{4 \pi r^3} \vec{x} \quad \text{with} \quad r=|\vec{x}|.$$
To get the potential, simply use the definition and think a bit about symmetries. Since the charge ##q## is sitting at the origin everything is symmetric under rotations around the origin. Thus it makes sense to try the ansatz that the potential depends only on ##r=|\vec{x}|##. Then you have
$$\vec{E}=-\vec{\nabla} \Phi(r)=-\frac{\vec{x}}{r} \Phi'(r).$$
Comparing the Coulomb law you see that
$$\Phi'(r)=-\frac{q}{4 \pi r^2} \; \Rightarrow \; \Phi(r)=\frac{q}{4 \pi r}.$$
I've chosen the arbitrary additive constant such that ##\Phi(r) \rightarrow 0## for ##r \rightarrow \infty## which is usually the most convenient choice.

Physicswise the sign is also clear. For a test charge ##q'## the potential energy is ##U=q' \Phi(r)##, which is the work to be done to bring the test charge at the position ##\vec{x}## from infinity. If ##q'>0## and ##q>0## the Coulomb force is repulsive and you need to do work against this repulsive force to bring the test charge from infinity to a place with distance ##r## from the charge ##q##, i.e., you put energy into the system, and that's why this energy must be positive, which is indeed the case ##U=q q'/(4 \pi r)##. If ##q q'<0## the Coulomb force is attractive and you have to take energy out of the system, which is why in this case ##U## is negative.
 
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torito_verdejo said:
Summary:: Given the potential ##V(\textbf{r})=-\int_\infty^r \textbf{E}\cdot d\textbf{l}##, and given that ##\textbf{E}## is antiparallel to ##d\textbf{l}##, should I evaluate the positive integral ##V(\textbf{r})=\int_\infty^r E\ dr##?

The final result will only differ in its sign, but this is crucial. Having a positively, radially oriented electric field ##\textbf{E}##, I understand that the sign of the integral should be positive (## - (- A) = A##), but it is not! How and why is this the case? A line integral where the vector field is antiparallel to the displacement vector should be negative; is this negativity already taken into account by the conventional minus sign in ##V(\textbf{r})=-\int_\Lambda \textbf{E}\cdot d\textbf{l}##?

Thank you very much.

##d\vec l## is defined by the direction you are moving. Let's forget about coordinates for a moment:

If ##\vec E## is radially outward and ##d \vec l## is radially inward, then the inner product is negative. The integral itself must be negative (and the potential difference must be positive).

If we use ##r## as a coordinate and integrate from ##0## to ##\infty##, then we get a positive integral, which is not right. But, if we integrate from ##\infty## to ##0##, then by the properties of the integral this gives us a negative integral, as we expect.

In summary:

##\int_{\infty}^{P} \vec E \cdot \vec dl = \int_{\infty}^{r_0} E dr = - \int_{r_0}^{\infty} E dr##

Where ##P## is a point at radius ##r_0##.

In summary, havng the bounds on ##r## go from ##\infty## to ##0## already factors in the negative sign. Alternatively, you can have ##r## go in its "normal" direction, from ##0## to ##\infty##, then then you do need to have a negative factor because that is antiparallel to the direction of your line element.
 
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vanhees71 said:
It's a convention that conservative fields' potentials are defined with the - sign. It comes from classical mechanics, where you like to have the total (conserved) energy being the sum of the kinetic and potential energy.

As for your example. I guess you think about the Coulomb field. You know that
$$\vec{E}(\vec{x})=\frac{q}{4 \pi r^3} \vec{x} \quad \text{with} \quad r=|\vec{x}|.$$
To get the potential, simply use the definition and think a bit about symmetries. Since the charge ##q## is sitting at the origin everything is symmetric under rotations around the origin. Thus it makes sense to try the ansatz that the potential depends only on ##r=|\vec{x}|##. Then you have
$$\vec{E}=-\vec{\nabla} \Phi(r)=-\frac{\vec{x}}{r} \Phi'(r).$$
Comparing the Coulomb law you see that
$$\Phi'(r)=-\frac{q}{4 \pi r^2} \; \Rightarrow \; \Phi(r)=\frac{q}{4 \pi r}.$$
I've chosen the arbitrary additive constant such that ##\Phi(r) \rightarrow 0## for ##r \rightarrow \infty## which is usually the most convenient choice.

Physicswise the sign is also clear. For a test charge ##q'## the potential energy is ##U=q' \Phi(r)##, which is the work to be done to bring the test charge at the position ##\vec{x}## from infinity. If ##q'>0## and ##q>0## the Coulomb force is repulsive and you need to do work against this repulsive force to bring the test charge from infinity to a place with distance ##r## from the charge ##q##, i.e., you put energy into the system, and that's why this energy must be positive, which is indeed the case ##U=q q'/(4 \pi r)##. If ##q q'<0## the Coulomb force is attractive and you have to take energy out of the system, which is why in this case ##U## is negative.
Thank you for the detailed explanation. :)
 
PeroK said:
##d\vec l## is defined by the direction you are moving. Let's forget about coordinates for a moment:

If ##\vec E## is radially outward and ##d \vec l## is radially inward, then the inner product is negative. The integral itself must be negative (and the potential difference must be positive).

If we use ##r## as a coordinate and integrate from ##0## to ##\infty##, then we get a positive integral, which is not right. But, if we integrate from ##\infty## to ##0##, then by the properties of the integral this gives us a negative integral, as we expect.

In summary:

##\int_{\infty}^{P} \vec E \cdot \vec dl = \int_{\infty}^{r_0} E dr = - \int_{r_0}^{\infty} E dr##

Where ##P## is a point at radius ##r_0##.

In summary, havng the bounds on ##r## go from ##\infty## to ##0## already factors in the negative sign. Alternatively, you can have ##r## go in its "normal" direction, from ##0## to ##\infty##, then then you do need to have a negative factor because that is antiparallel to the direction of your line element.
Thank you, this solved my doubt.
 
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