📖 generic · CBSE Class 12th English Medium · PHYSICS PART-1 · Page 68table

2.8 P OTENTIAL E NERGY IN AN E XTERNAL F IELD

Chapter 2: Chapter 2 · PHYSICS PART-1

. P OTENTIAL E NERGY IN AN E XTERNAL F IELD . . Potential energy of a single charge In Section .

, the source of the electric field was specified – the charges and their locations - and the potential energy of the system of those charges was determined. In this section, we ask a related but a distinct question. What is the potential energy of a charge q in a given field? This question was, in fact, the starting point that led us to the notion of the electrostatic potential (Sections .

and . ). But here we address this question again to clarify in what way it is different from the discussion in Section . .

The main difference is that we are now concerned with the potential energy of a charge (or charges) in an external field. The external field E is not produced by the given charge(s) whose potential energy we wish to calculate. E is produced by sources external to the given charge(s).The external sources may be known, but often they are unknown or unspecified; what is specified is the electric field E or the electrostatic potential V due to the external sources. We assume that the charge q does not significantly affect the sources producing the external field.

This is true if q is very small, or the external sources are held fixed by other unspecified forces. Even if q is finite, its influence on the external sources may still be ignored in the situation when very strong sources far away at infinity produce a finite field E in the region of interest. Note again that we are interested in determining the potential energy of a given charge q (and later, a system of charges) in the external field; we are not interested in the potential energy of the sources producing the external electric field. The external electric field E and the corresponding external potential V may vary from point to point.

By definition, V at a point P is the work done in bringing a unit positive charge from infinity to the point P.

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