Evaluating Electric Dipole Potential: qd cos \theta?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on evaluating the electric dipole potential, specifically the scalar product of the dipole moment and the unit vector in the equation. The electric dipole potential is expressed as V(r) = (1/4πε₀)(p·r̂)/r², leading to the realization that p·r = p·|r|·cos(θ). Participants confirm that the unit vector r̂ is defined as r/|r|, which simplifies the equation to V(r) = (qd cos(θ))/(4πε₀ r²). The algebraic steps are clarified, and the final expression for the electric dipole potential is affirmed as correct. The discussion concludes with a successful resolution of the algebraic confusion.
ronaldoshaky
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Hello

The electric dipole potential is

V (\textbf{r}) = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_o} \frac{\textbf{p}\bullet \hat{r} }{r^2}

I am trying to figure out the algebra in my book. How do you evaluate the scalar product of the dipole moment and the unit vector in the above equation?

I get qd cos \theta but i am not sure if that is right.

Thank you
 
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You might expand the fraction with |\vec r|!

This yields
\phi (\vec r) = \frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_o} \frac{\vec p \cdot |\vec r^{\,}|\hat{r} }{r^3}​
Maybe you cope with this!?
 
I don't understand how you expand the fraction. The vector, r in brackets is the norm of r?

I see that r-hat is the unit vector. Shouldnt r-hat = r / |r|
 
you're right


\hat r = \frac{\vec r}{|\vec r^{\,}|} \qquad \Leftrightarrow \qquad \hat r \cdot |\vec r^{\,}| = \vec r​


this applied to the primary equation yields


\phi (\vec r) = \frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_o} \frac{\vec p \cdot |\vec r^{\,}|\hat{r} }{r^3} = \frac{1}{4\pi\varepsilon_o} \frac{\vec p \cdot \vec {r} }{r^3}​


it follows, that


\vec p \cdot \vec r = p r \cos \vartheta​


do you agree?
 
So does that mean that after evaluating the scalar product (where p = qd) the electric dipole potential would equal to

V(r) = \frac{q d cos\theta}{4 \pi \epsilon_o r^2}
 
Absolutely right! I hope that is a sufficient answer to your question!?
 
Yes I can now see the whole alegebra behind the equations in the book!

Thanks very much Saunderson!
 
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