Wikipedia electric charge page confusion

In summary, the conversation discusses why the picture on Wikipedia's page on electrical charge shows arrows going from a positively charged object to a negatively charged object. It is explained that these arrows represent electric field lines, not the direction of electron flow. The arrows can also indicate the strength of the electric field. It is mentioned that assigning one arrow to each line is better than having two arrows of opposite directions. The conversation also touches on the concept of electric field direction and how it affects charges placed in the field.
  • #1
Cash Fulton
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1
Why does Wikipedia's page on electrical charge have a picture of a positivity charged object with arrows going to a negatively charged object? Doesn’t electrons flow from a negatively charged object to a positively charged object? Or is the picture just showing conventional current?

220px-VFPt_charges_plus_minus_thumb.svg.png

Thanks.
 
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  • #2
Those lines are just the electric field lines, it has nothing to do with electron current. The significance of drawing electric field lines comes out, for example if one wants to draw equipotential surfaces, which is a surface on which every electric field line must pierce through perpendicularly.
 
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  • #3
blue_leaf77 said:
Those lines are just the electric field lines, it has nothing to do with electron current. The significance of drawing electric field lines comes out, for example if one wants to draw equipotential surfaces, which is a surface on which every electric field line must pierce through perpendicularly.
So an electric field goes from positive to negative?
 
  • #4
Giving an arrow to the electric field lines is just a convention, it's not like the positive charge acts as an electric field emitter and the negative charge as the receiver. Electric field lines can also indicate the electric field strength dependence on position, the denser the lines the stronger the field there. In your picture, we can infer that the electric field strength is stronger around either charges and gets weaker as one goes farther from both of them.
 
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  • #5
blue_leaf77 said:
Giving an arrow to the electric field lines is just a convention, it's not like the positive charge acts as an electric field emitter and the negative charge as the receiver. Electric field lines can also indicate the electric field strength dependence on position, the denser the lines the stronger the field there. In your picture, we can infer that the electric field strength is stronger around either charges and gets weaker as one goes farther from both of them.
Ah, so you could say that it would be a better representation to put arrows going in both directions on those lines.
 
  • #6
Cash Fulton said:
Ah, so you could say that it would be a better representation to put arrows going in both directions on those lines.
No matter how you look at it, assigning one arrow (either direction) to each line is better than two arrows of opposite directions because this way you don't always need to draw the charge type on all existing charges in the system.
 
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  • #7
blue_leaf77 said:
No matter how you look at it, assigning one arrow (either direction) to each line is better than two arrows of opposite directions because this way you don't always need to draw the charge type on all existing charges in the system.
Appreciate you helping dude.
 
  • #8
No. Positive and negative charges will experience opposite forces from any given electric field. The arrows give us a way of visualizing this. A positive charge will feel a force in the direction of the arrows while a negative charge will feel a force in the direction opposite that of the arrows. So in your picture the positive charge is pulled towards the negative charge, which is with the arrows, while the negative charge is pulled towards the positive charge, or against the arrows. Both end up meeting in the middle, assuming they were free to move.
 
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  • #9
Cash Fulton said:
So an electric field goes from positive to negative?
Yes!
 
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  • #10
The direction of the electric field at any point is (by definition) the direction of the force experienced by a small, positive probe charge placed in the field at the given point.
It could have been defined based on a negative probe but it just wasn't.
 
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1. What is electric charge according to Wikipedia?

According to the Wikipedia page on electric charge, electric charge is a fundamental physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force when placed in an electromagnetic field.

2. How is electric charge measured?

Electric charge is measured in coulombs (C) using an instrument called an electrometer. The magnitude of the charge can be positive or negative, with the unit of charge being the elementary charge (e=1.602 x 10^-19 C).

3. What is the difference between positive and negative electric charges?

Positive electric charges have a surplus of protons, while negative electric charges have a surplus of electrons. These charges interact with each other through electric fields and can attract or repel depending on the type of charge.

4. Are there different types of electric charge?

Currently, there are two types of electric charge known as positive and negative. However, there are theories that suggest the existence of other types of charge, such as monopoles, which have not been observed in experiments yet.

5. Can electric charge be created or destroyed?

No, electric charge cannot be created or destroyed. It can only be transferred from one object to another. This is known as the principle of conservation of charge and is a fundamental law of physics.

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