Electric Field and Potential: Complete Guide — PhysicsAI
Electrostatics

Electric Field and Potential: Complete Guide

Understand how charges interact through invisible fields, with interactive simulations, real-world examples, and step-by-step explanations.

You know that moment when you touch a metal doorknob in winter and feel a tiny shock? That’s electricity quietly reminding you it’s always around us. Most people don’t realize that behind that small spark, there is a full system of ELECTRICITY & MAGNETISM working in space even before contact happens.

When I first tried understanding electric fields in physics, it felt invisible and confusing. But once you connect it with real situations like lightning, phone charging, or even static hair standing up, it starts making sense in a very practical way.

Definition of Electric Field and Electric Potential

Electric field is basically the “invisible influence zone” around a charged object. If you place another charge nearby, it immediately feels a push or pull without touching.

Electric potential is a bit different. It tells us how much energy a charge will have at a point in space because of that field. You can think of it like “electric height” where charges naturally move from high to low.

This idea is strongly connected to Coulomb’s Law, because the same force between charges creates both field and potential in space.

E

Electric Field

Force per unit charge experienced by a test charge placed in the field. Measured in N/C or V/m.

V

Electric Potential

Energy per unit charge at a point in space. A scalar quantity measured in Volts (V).

Q

Point Charge

The source charge that creates the electric field and potential around it. Measured in Coulombs (C).

Electric Field Formula (E = F/q)

Electric field is defined as force per unit charge.

E = F / q
Electric field = Force / Test charge

Here, F is the force experienced by a small test charge q. The direction of E is the direction a positive charge would move.

In real life, this is why a small dust particle or charge in a storm cloud suddenly moves without being pushed physically. The field itself is doing the work.

Electric Field Due to Point Charge

For a single point charge, electric field becomes:

E = kQ / r²
Field depends on charge and distance

This comes directly from Coulomb’s Law, where force decreases as distance increases. That’s why lightning feels strongest when it is closer.

If the charge is positive, field goes outward. If negative, it comes inward. This direction idea is very important in understanding Magnetism later on.

Electric Potential Formula (V = kQ/r)

Electric potential tells us energy per unit charge at a point.

V = kQ / r
Potential due to a point charge

Unlike field, potential is scalar, so it has no direction. It just tells how “high or low energy” a point is.

This is why batteries are so useful. A 9V battery simply means a difference of 9 joules per coulomb between two points.

Electric Potential Around a Charge

Around a positive charge, potential is high near the charge and decreases as we move away.

Around a negative charge, potential becomes lower near it.

This creates a kind of “energy slope” that pushes charges naturally from high to low potential without any physical contact.

Interactive Electric Field Visualizer

See how electric field lines radiate from a point charge. Adjust charge magnitude and polarity to observe changes in field strength and direction.

±5 μC

Field Data

Charge (Q): +5 μC
Field at 1m (E): 44,955 N/C
Potential at 1m (V): 44,955 V

Polarity Info

Polarity: Positive
Field Direction: Outward
Lines Count: 16

Difference Between Electric Field and Electric Potential

Electric field tells us force direction and strength. Electric potential tells us energy level.

Field is vector, potential is scalar.

Field depends on how fast potential changes in space, not just its value. This is why two points can have same potential but still no movement if field is zero.

Aspect Electric Field Electric Potential
Definition Force per unit charge Energy per unit charge
Nature Vector quantity Scalar quantity
Symbol E V
Unit N/C or V/m Volt (V)
Direction Has direction (from + to -) No direction

Relationship Between Electric Field and Potential

Electric field is basically the rate at which potential changes in space.

E = -dV/dx
Field = Negative gradient of potential

The minus sign is important. It means field always goes from higher potential to lower potential.

This is similar to how water flows downhill. Charges also “roll down” the potential difference naturally.

Electric Field as Gradient of Potential

In 3D space, this becomes:

E = -∇V
Field is steepest downward slope of potential

This tells us electric field is the steepest downward slope of potential.

It’s like standing on a hill. The direction where you go down fastest is the direction of electric field.

Equipotential Surfaces

Equipotential surfaces are places where potential is same everywhere.

If you move a charge on such a surface, no energy is gained or lost. That’s why field lines always cut them at right angles.

A simple real example is the surface of a charged metal object. The whole surface stays at same potential.

Uniform Electric Field and Potential Difference

In a uniform field, relation becomes simple:

E = V / d
Uniform field between parallel plates

This happens between two parallel plates like in capacitors.

This is used in real devices where we need constant electric force like printers, display screens, and particle accelerators.

Energy in Electric Field

When a charge moves in a field, energy changes depending on potential difference.

Work done is:

W = qV
Work = Charge × Potential difference

This is why electrons moving through circuits actually carry energy that powers devices.

Applications of Electric Field and Potential

In real life, this concept is everywhere. In ELECTRICITY & MAGNETISM, electric fields help design circuits, capacitors, and sensors.

In electronics, capacitors store energy using electric fields. In medicine, ECG machines detect tiny voltage changes in the heart.

Even lightning is just a huge natural discharge of electric potential difference in clouds.

Capacitors

Store energy using electric fields between plates.

ECG Machines

Detect tiny voltage changes in the heart.

Lightning

Huge natural discharge of potential difference.

Sensors

Electric field sensors in touchscreens and devices.

Circuit Design
Medical Devices
Particle Accelerators

Solved Example: Electric Field & Potential Calculation

Solved Example: Point Charge Field & Potential

A point charge of Q = +3 × 10-6 C is placed in space. Calculate the electric field and potential at a distance of r = 0.5 m from the charge. (k = 9 × 109 N·m²/C²)

Using the formulas:

E = kQ / r²
V = kQ / r

E = 108,000 N/C

The electric field points radially outward since the charge is positive.

V = 54,000 V

Potential decreases as we move farther from the charge.

Electric Field & Potential Calculator

Select what you want to calculate, adjust the sliders, and get instant results.

E = kQ / r²
5 μC
2 m
Electric Field (E) 11,250 N/C

Practice Questions

1. What is electric field and its unit?
2. Write formula of electric potential due to point charge.
3. Why electric field is negative gradient of potential?
4. What is the difference between electric field and electric potential?
5. A charge of 2 μC is placed at a point. Calculate the electric field at a distance of 0.3 m from it.

Interactive Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)

Test your understanding. Click on your answer choice:

1. Electric field is:
View Explanation
Correct Answer: B. Electric field is a vector quantity because it has both magnitude and direction.
2. Unit of electric potential is:
View Explanation
Correct Answer: C. Electric potential is measured in Volts (V). Newton is force, Coulomb is charge, Tesla is magnetic field.
3. What happens to electric field when distance from a point charge is doubled?
View Explanation
Correct Answer: C. Electric field follows inverse square law (E ∝ 1/r²). Doubling distance reduces field to one-fourth.

Real Life Uses

Electric field and potential are not just theory. They control how circuits work, how lightning forms, and how devices charge.

Even in Magnetism, changing electric fields create magnetic effects, which is the base of motors and generators.

Without this concept, modern electronics simply would not exist.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is electric field in simple words?

It is the invisible region where a charge feels force.

What is electric potential?

It is energy per unit charge at a point in space.

What is the main difference between them?

Field tells force direction, potential tells energy level.

Why electric field is negative gradient?

Because charges move naturally from high to low energy.

How are electric field and potential related?

Electric field is the negative rate of change of potential with distance. In uniform fields, E = V/d.

Explore Related Topics

Conclusion

Electric field and potential are basically two ways of looking at the same hidden behavior of charges in space. One tells you force, the other tells you energy.

If you can picture potential as “height” and field as “slope,” most of electrostatics becomes surprisingly easy.