In physics, an electric field or E-field is an effect produced by an electric charge (or a time-varying magnetic field) that exerts a force on charged objects in the field. The SI units of the electric field are newtons per coulomb or volts per meter (which are equivalent). Electric fields contain electrical energy with energy density proportional to the square of the field intensity. Electric fields exist around all charges; the direction of field lines at a point is defined by the direction of the electric force exerted on a positive test charge placed at that point. The strength of the field is defined by the ratio of the electric force on a charge at a point to the magnitude of the charge placed at that point. In the dynamic case the electric field is accompanied by a magnetic field, by a flow of energy, and by real photons.
The concept of electric field was introduced by Michael Faraday.
The electric field or electric field intensity is a vector quantity, and the electric field strength is the magnitude of this vector.
The electric field is defined as the proportionality constant between charge and force (in other words, the force per unit of test charge):
However, note that this equation is only true in the case of electrostatics, that is to say, when there is nothing moving. The more general case of moving charges causes this equation to become the Lorentz force equation. When we speak of a "moveable test charge", this means only that the above equations hold regardless of the position of the (stationary) test charge.
Furthermore, Coulomb's law is actually a special case of Gauss's Law, a more fundamental description of the relationship between the distribution of electric charge in space and the resulting electric field. Gauss's law is one of Maxwell's equations, a set of four laws governing electromagnetics.
Electric fields follow the superposition principle. If more than one charge is present, the total electric field at any point is equal to the vector sum of the respective electric fields that each object would create in the absence of the others.
If this principle is extended to an infinite number of infinitesimally small elements of charge, the following formula results:
where is the charge density, or the amount of charge per unit volume.
The electric field at a point is equal to the negative gradient of the electric potential there. In symbols,
Where is the scalar field representing the electric potential at a given point. If several spatially distributed charges generate such an electric potential, e.g. in a solid, an electric field gradient may also be defined.
Considering the permittivity of a material, which is the product of the permittivity of free space and the material-dependent relative permittivity , yields the Electric displacement field:
Similarities between electrostatic and gravitational forces:
Dissimilarities between electrostatic and gravitational forces:
Charges are not the only sources of electric fields. According to Faraday's law of induction,
where indicates the curl of the electric field, and represents the vector rate of decrease of magnetic flux density with time. This means that a magnetic field changing in time produces a curled electric field, possibly also changing in time.
The situation in which electric or magnetic fields change in time is no longer electrostatics, but rather electrodynamics or electromagnetics. In this case, Coulomb's law no longer provides a useful definition of electric field as given above. Instead, the more general Gauss's Law, along with Faraday's law, determines the electric field.
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"Electric field".
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