kashan123999 said:
Homework Statement
I don't seem to understand the proper intuition behind the electric field intensity potential difference relation? please can anyone explain it with solid intuition and maybe a good analogy...and can anyone give a short analogy about the concept of electric field intensity,i just have grasped the concept,but i lack confidence while explaining it to others...
Homework Equations
E = - delta v/delta r
The Attempt at a Solution
The intensity of the electric field or electric field strength at a point P is the force exerted to unit positive charge (situated at that point P. )
The infinitesimal work dW done by the electric field
E when the unit positive charge displaces by
dr is dW=
Edr.
The work of the electric field when a unit positive charge moves from A to B is
W_{AB}=\int_A^B{\vec E \vec {dr}}
The static electric field is conservative, so the line integral does nt depend on the path. W
AB is determined by the initial an final points.
So you can say that W
AB = V(A)-V(B), where V is a function of the position, and A is the starting point and B is the end point. If the charge moves in the direction of the field the work is positive, V(A)>V(B) We usually define the change of a function as the final value - initial value. So we can write \Delta V = V(B)-V(A) =- \int_A^B{\vec E \vec {dr}}
You can choose the potential that it is zero at B. Then the function V(x,y,z) is equal to the work done by the field when the unit positive charge moves from a point (x,y,z) to the place where the potential is zero.
Consider a small displacement
Δr from point P (position vector
r. The potential changes by
grad(V)
Δr when the unit positive charge moves from
r to
r+Δr.
If A and B are close, the change of the potential is ΔV=gradient V
Δr. The direction of the gradient points to the maximum increase of the potential. Choose
dr in that direction, you can say that grad V = dV/dr, and then
\Delta V =(dV/dr) Δr=-\frac{d\int{\vec E \vec {dr}}}{dr} Δr
dV /dr is the highest directional derivative: it is the gradient. So
grad V=-E.
When determining the gradient you can formally take the derivative with respect to vector
r. For example, the potential around a point charge in the origin is V= kQ/r. r is the magnitude of the position vector
r. r=\sqrt{(\vec r)^2}
E=- \frac{dV}{d\vec r}=\frac{1}{2}kQ \left(\sqrt{(\vec r)^2}\right )^{-3}2 \vec r= kQ\frac{\vec r}{|r|^3}
ehild