Why electric field line are curved at top of two plates.

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Electric field lines between two parallel plates are straight and uniform due to the uniform charge distribution, but they curve at the edges because the plates do not extend infinitely. The curvature occurs as the edges behave like line charges, causing the field lines to radiate outward. This effect is more pronounced at the edges where the electric field is stronger, as indicated by the density of field lines. The presence of charges on both the front and back surfaces of the plates contributes to this phenomenon. Therefore, the curvature of the electric field lines at the ends of the plates is a result of their finite size and the nature of the electric field generated by the charges.
Aladin
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Hello.
I can't understand that why electric field lines are radial between two parallal plates but curved at the end.? what is the reason.
 
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I think you mean parallel and not radial?
This is because the parallel plates do not extend out to infinity in each direction. Because it is a conducting plate the charges will build up on the surface. Therefore there will be a charge on the front of the plate, as well as on the back of the plate. This happens on both plates for both charges. Also there are more field lines on the edges of the plate. (electric field is stronger where the radius is small).
 
My question related snap in shown.please tell me why field lines are curved at the end of plates?
 

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Near the end of either plate, the edge of the plate looks a line charge, from which the field lines would extend radially (or you can think of it as a point charge in your 2-D picture). The edges of the two plates generate field lines similar to those from two oppositely charged parallel line charge distributions, i.e. curved field lines.
 
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