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PhysicsES

Electrostatics

Apply concepts from Electrostatics to problem-solving. Focus on numerical practice and real-world applications.

3-4 Qs/year55 minPhase 1 · APPLICATION

Concept Core

Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter. It is conserved (total charge in an isolated system remains constant), quantized (q = ne, where n is an integer and e = 1.6 x 101910^{-19} C; [e] = [A T], SI unit: coulomb, C), and additive (algebraic sum of individual charges).

Coulomb's law gives the force between two point charges: F = kq1q2/r2r^{2}, where k = 1/(4 π  ϵ0\pi \; \epsilon_{0}) = 9 x 10910^{9} N m2C2\frac{m^{2}}{C^{2}}, q1 and q2 are the charges (C), and r is the separation (m).
Dimensional formula: [F] = [M L T2T^{-2}], SI unit: newton (N).
The permittivity of free space ϵ0\epsilon_{0} = 8.85 x 1012  C210^{-12} \; C^{2}/(N m2m^{2}); [ϵ0\epsilon_{0}] = [M1  L3  T4  A2M^{-1} \; L^{-3} \; T^{4} \; A^{2}]. The superposition principle states that the net force on a charge is the vector sum of individual Coulomb forces.

The electric field at a point is E = F/q0q_{0} = kQ/r2r^{2}, where q0q_{0} is a small positive test charge; [E] = [M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}], SI unit: N/C = V/m. Field lines originate from positive charges, terminate on negative charges, never cross, and their density represents field strength.
For a uniformly charged ring on the axis, E = kQx/(R2R^{2} + x2x^{2})^(32\frac{3}{2}), which is zero at the center and maximum at x = R/2\sqrt{2}.

An electric dipole consists of two equal and opposite charges separated by distance 2l.
Dipole moment p = q .
2l (direction from -q to +q); [p] = [A T L], SI unit: C m.
The torque on a dipole in a uniform field is τ\tau = pE sin(θ\theta); [τ\tau] = [M L2  T2L^{2} \; T^{-2}], SI unit: N m.
The field on the axial line is EaxialE_{axial} = 2kp/r3r^{3} (for r >> l), and on the equatorial line EeqE_{eq} = kp/r3r^{3} — note the factor of 2 difference.

Gauss's law: Electric flux Φ\Phi = integral(E .
dA) = qencϵ0\frac{q_{enc}}{\epsilon_{0}}; [Φ\Phi] = [M L3  T3  A1L^{3} \; T^{-3} \; A^{-1}], SI unit: V m.
Applications: infinite line charge E = λ\lambda/(2 π  ϵ0\pi \; \epsilon_{0} r), infinite plane sheet E = σ\sigma/(2 ϵ0\epsilon_{0}), conducting sphere E = kQ/r2r^{2} (outside), E = 0 (inside), and insulating sphere E = kQr/R3R^{3} (inside, linearly increasing).

Electric potential: V = kQ/r; [V] = [M L2  T3  A1L^{2} \; T^{-3} \; A^{-1}], SI unit: volt (V). The relation E = -dV/dr connects field and potential. Equipotential surfaces are perpendicular to field lines, and no work is done moving a charge along them. Potential energy U = kq1q2/r; [U] = [M L2  T2L^{2} \; T^{-2}], SI unit: joule (J). Sign convention: U > 0 for like charges (repulsion), U < 0 for unlike charges (attraction).

Capacitance: C = Q/V; [C] = [M1  L2  T4  A2M^{-1} \; L^{-2} \; T^{4} \; A^{2}], SI unit: farad (F).
For a parallel plate capacitor, C = ϵ0\epsilon_{0} A/d (vacuum) or C = K ϵ0\epsilon_{0} A/d (with dielectric constant K).
Series: 1/CeqC_{eq} = 1/C1 + 1/C2.
Parallel: CeqC_{eq} = C1 + C2.
Energy stored: U = (12\frac{1}{2})CV2CV^{2} = Q2Q^{2}/(2C) = (12\frac{1}{2})QV; [U] = [M L2  T2L^{2} \; T^{-2}], SI unit: J.

The key testable concept is Gauss's law applications and capacitor combinations with dielectrics, which together account for the majority of NEET electrostatics questions.

Solved Numericals

N1. Two charges +3 uC and -3 uC are placed 20 cm apart. Find the electric field at a point on the axial line 30 cm from the center of the dipole.

Given: q = 3 uC = 3 x 10610^{-6} C, 2l = 20 cm = 0.20 m so l = 0.10 m, r = 30 cm = 0.30 m. Dipole moment: p = q x 2l = 3 x 10610^{-6} C x 0.20 m = 6 x 10710^{-7} C m.

Exact formula (axial): E = 2kpr/(r2r^{2} - l2l^{2})2 E = 2 x 9 x 10910^{9} N m2C2\frac{m^{2}}{C^{2}} x 6 x 10710^{-7} C m x 0.30 m / (0.30230^{2} - 0.10210^{2})2 m4m^{4} E = 2 x 9 x 10910^{9} x 6 x 10710^{-7} x 0.30 / (0.09 - 0.01)2 E = 3.24 x 10310^{3} / 6.4 x 10310^{-3} = 5.06 x 10510^{5} / 6.4 x 10310^{-3} Numerator: 2 x 9 x 10910^{9} x 6 x 10710^{-7} x 0.30 = 3240 N m2m^{2}/(C m2m^{2}) ... Let us recalculate step by step. Numerator = 2 x (9 x 10910^{9}) x (6 x 10710^{-7}) x 0.30 = 2 x 9 x 6 x 0.30 x 10^(9-7) = 32.4 x 10210^{2} = 3240. Denominator = (0.09 - 0.01)2 = (0.08)2 = 6.4 x 103  m410^{-3} \; m^{4}. E = 3240 / 6.4 x 10310^{-3} = 5.0625 x 10510^{5} N/C.

Approximate formula (r >> l): EapproxE_{approx} = 2kp/r3r^{3} = 2 x 9 x 10910^{9} x 6 x 10710^{-7} / (0.30)3 = 10800 / 0.027 = 4.0 x 10510^{5} N/C.

The approximate formula gives a lower value because it neglects the l2l^{2} term. The exact value is 5.06 x 10510^{5} N/C. At r = 0.30 m with l = 0.10 m, r is only 3 times l, so the approximation has noticeable error (~21%).

N2. A parallel plate capacitor of capacitance 100 pF is charged to 200 V. Find the energy stored. If a dielectric of K = 5 is inserted with battery disconnected, find new capacitance, voltage, and energy.

Initial: C = 100 pF = 100 x 101210^{-12} F = 101010^{-10} F, V = 200 V. Energy: U = (12\frac{1}{2})CV2CV^{2} = (12\frac{1}{2}) x 101010^{-10} F x (200 V)2 = (12\frac{1}{2}) x 101010^{-10} x 4 x 10410^{4} = 2 x 10610^{-6} J = 2 uJ. Charge stored: Q = CV = 101010^{-10} x 200 = 2 x 10810^{-8} C = 20 nC.

Battery disconnected (Q remains constant): New capacitance: C' = KC = 5 x 100 pF = 500 pF = 5 x 101010^{-10} F. New voltage: V' = Q/C' = 2 x 10810^{-8} C / 5 x 101010^{-10} F = 40 V. New energy: U' = (12\frac{1}{2})C'V'2 = (12\frac{1}{2}) x 5 x 101010^{-10} x (40)2 = (12\frac{1}{2}) x 5 x 101010^{-10} x 1600 = 4 x 10710^{-7} J = 0.4 uJ.

Energy decreases from 2 uJ to 0.4 uJ (by factor K = 5). The energy is spent in pulling the dielectric into the capacitor.

N3. Using Gauss's law, derive the electric field at distance r from an infinitely long straight wire with linear charge density λ\lambda = 5 uC/m. Calculate E at r = 10 cm.

Choose a cylindrical Gaussian surface of radius r and length L, coaxial with the wire. By symmetry, E is radial and constant over the curved surface, and zero through the flat ends. Flux: Φ\Phi = E x 2 π\pi r L (curved surface only). Charge enclosed: qencq_{enc} = λ\lambda L. By Gauss's law: E x 2 π\pi r L = λ\lambda L / ϵ0\epsilon_{0}. Therefore: E = λ\lambda / (2 π  ϵ0\pi \; \epsilon_{0} r); [E] = [M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}], SI unit: N/C.

Calculation: λ\lambda = 5 uC/m = 5 x 10610^{-6} C/m, r = 10 cm = 0.10 m. E = 5 x 10610^{-6} / (2 π\pi x 8.85 x 101210^{-12} x 0.10) = 5 x 10610^{-6} / (5.563 x 101210^{-12}) = 8.99 x 10510^{5} N/C ~ 9.0 x 10510^{5} N/C.

Dimensional check: [C/m] / [C2C^{2}/(N m2m^{2}) x m] = [C/m] x [N m2C2\frac{m^{2}}{C^{2}}] / [m] = [N/C]. Verified.

Key Testable Concept

Dimensional check: [C/m] / [C^2/(N m^2) x m] = [C/m] x [N m^2/C^2] / [m] = [N/C]. Verified.

Comparison Tables

A) Formula Table — Electric Field

ConfigurationFormulaVariablesDimensional FormulaSI UnitKey Notes
Point chargeE = kQ/r2r^{2}Q = source charge, r = distance[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CRadial field, inversely proportional to r2r^{2}
Dipole (axial)E = 2kp/r3r^{3}p = dipole moment, r >> l[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CAlong dipole axis, twice the equatorial value
Dipole (equatorial)E = kp/r3r^{3}p = dipole moment, r >> l[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CAntiparallel to dipole moment
Ring (on axis)E = kQx/(R2R^{2} + x2x^{2})^(32\frac{3}{2})Q = total charge, R = radius, x = axial distance[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CE = 0 at center, max at x = R/2\sqrt{2}
Infinite wire (Gauss)E = λ\lambda/(2 π  ϵ0\pi \; \epsilon_{0} r)λ\lambda = linear charge density, r = perpendicular distance[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CRadially outward for positive λ\lambda
Infinite plane sheetE = σ\sigma/(2 ϵ0\epsilon_{0})σ\sigma = surface charge density[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CUniform, independent of distance
Conducting sphere (outside)E = kQ/r2r^{2}r > R (sphere radius)[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CBehaves as point charge at center
Conducting sphere (inside)E = 0All charge resides on surface
Insulating sphere (inside)E = kQr/R3R^{3}r < R, uniform volume charge[M L T3  A1T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]N/CIncreases linearly with r

B) Formula Table — Potential & Energy

QuantityFormulaVariablesDimensional FormulaSI Unit
Potential (point charge)V = kQ/rQ = charge, r = distance[M L2  T3  A1L^{2} \; T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]V (volt)
Potential (dipole, axial)V = kp cos(θ\theta)/r2r^{2}p = dipole moment, θ\theta = angle from axis[M L2  T3  A1L^{2} \; T^{-3} \; A^{-1}]V
Potential (dipole, equatorial)V = 0
Potential energy (two charges)U = kq1q2/rq1, q2 = charges, r = separation[M L2  T2L^{2} \; T^{-2}]J (joule)
Potential energy (system)U = sum of kqi qj/rij for all pairs[M L2  T2L^{2} \; T^{-2}]J
CapacitanceC = Q/V = ϵ0\epsilon_{0} A/dQ = charge, V = potential, A = area, d = separation[M1  L2  T4  A2M^{-1} \; L^{-2} \; T^{4} \; A^{2}]F (farad)
Energy storedU = (12\frac{1}{2})CV2CV^{2} = Q2Q^{2}/(2C)C = capacitance, V = voltage, Q = charge[M L2  T2L^{2} \; T^{-2}]J

C) Capacitor Combinations

ConfigurationEquivalent CapacitanceChargeVoltageEnergy Rule
Series1/CeqC_{eq} = 1/C1 + 1/C2 + ...Same Q on allV divides: V = V1 + V2 + ...Smaller C stores more energy (U = Q22\frac{Q^{2}}{2}C)
ParallelCeqC_{eq} = C1 + C2 + ...Q divides: Q = Q1 + Q2 + ...Same V across allLarger C stores more energy (U = (12\frac{1}{2})CV2CV^{2})

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