Electric charge is the physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force when placed in an electromagnetic field there are two types of electric charge.
Electric field positive and negative point charge.
Having both magnitude and direction it follows that an electric field is a vector field.
When this principle is logically extended to the movement of charge within an electric field the relationship between work energy and the direction that a charge moves becomes more obvious.
For example if you place a positive test charge in an electric field and the charge moves to the right you know the direction of the electric field in that region points to the right.
The electric field is radially outward from a positive charge and radially in toward a negative point charge.
Consider figure 1 which shows an isolated positive point charge and its electric field lines.
Electric field is defined as the electric force per unit charge.
A pattern of several lines are drawn that extend between infinity and the source charge or from a source charge to a second nearby charge.
A useful means of visually representing the vector nature of an electric field is through the use of electric field lines of force.
The pattern of lines sometimes referred to as electric field lines point in the direction that a positive test charge would.
Of course the two are related.
Electric field lines radiate out from a positive charge and terminate on negative charges.
469 70 as the electric field is defined in terms of force and force is a vector i e.
Positive and negative commonly carried by protons and electrons respectively.
Note that the electric field is defined for a positive test charge q so that the field lines point away from a positive charge and toward a negative charge see figure 2 the electric field strength is exactly proportional to the number of field lines per unit area since the magnitude of the electric field for a point charge is latex e k frac q r 2 latex and area is proportional to.
The direction of an electrical field at a point is the same as the direction of the electrical force acting on a positive test charge at that point.
An object with an absence of net charge is referred to as neutral.
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Like charges repel each other and unlike charges attract each other.
We can represent electric potentials voltages pictorially just as we drew pictures to illustrate electric fields.
An accumulation of electric charges at a point a tiny volume in space is called a point charge.
Consider the diagram above in which a positive source charge is creating an electric field and a positive test charge being moved against and with the field.