Mathematical definition
- E is electric field intensity.
- F is the force experienced by the test charge.
- q₀ is a small positive test charge.
- Unit: N/C or V/m.
- Direction: direction of force on a positive test charge.
Electric field is the invisible influence created around a charge. It tells us how strongly and in what direction another charge would experience electric force at any point in space.
Section 1
Electric field at a point is defined as the force experienced per unit positive test charge placed at that point.
A source charge modifies the space around it. If a tiny positive charge is brought to a point, it experiences force because that point already has an electric field. The test charge is kept very small so that it measures the field without disturbing the source charge distribution.
Electric field is a vector quantity. A large magnitude of E means a strong force per coulomb; direction tells where a positive charge would be pushed.
Section 2
The electric field due to a point charge is obtained directly from Coulomb's law by dividing force by the positive test charge.
Section 3
Field lines are imaginary curves drawn so that the tangent at any point gives the direction of electric field. Their spacing represents field strength.
Section 4
Electric field gives a powerful way to understand action at a distance without imagining that one charge directly pulls another through empty space.
A charge creates electric field in surrounding space. Another charge placed there interacts with the field and experiences force.
Electric field helps explain force, potential, capacitance, dipoles, conductors, dielectrics and Gauss law.
For CBSE, NEET and JEE, electric field is the bridge between charge-force problems and advanced electrostatics.
Section 5
Section 6
An electric dipole consists of two equal and opposite charges +q and -q separated by a small distance 2a.
Section 7
At an axial point on the side of +q, the net field is along the dipole moment. On the opposite side, the direction remains along the axial line according to vector subtraction of the two fields.
Section 8
Section 9
| Point of comparison | Axial point | Equatorial point |
|---|---|---|
| Position of point | On the line joining -q and +q | On the perpendicular bisector of the dipole |
| Magnitude | (1 / 4πε₀) × [2pr / (r² - a²)²] | (1 / 4πε₀) × [p / (r² + a²)^(3/2)] |
| Direction | Along dipole axis; commonly along p on the +q side | Opposite to dipole moment |
| Short dipole formula | (1 / 4πε₀) × 2p / r³ | (1 / 4πε₀) × p / r³ |
| NEET importance | Direct formula and direction questions are common | Frequently tests the “opposite to p” direction trap |
| JEE importance | Used in superposition and limiting approximation | Used in vector cancellation and component-based reasoning |
Section 10
In electrostatics, we mainly study electric field due to charges at rest. The field due to stationary point charges, systems of charges and dipoles forms the foundation of CBSE, NEET and JEE electrostatics.
A moving charge produces both electric field and magnetic field. At non-relativistic school level, the electric field concept is usually introduced using stationary point charges.
Use the term moving charge or charge in motion. Do not write “current-carrying charge” as a standard term. Advanced treatment of fields due to moving charges belongs to electromagnetism and relativity.
Section 11
Section 12
The source charge creates the field. The test charge measures it. Do not mix Q and q₀.
Field is outward for positive source charge and inward for negative source charge.
Electric field has magnitude and direction; superposition must be vector addition.
Axial short dipole field has 2p/r³, equatorial has p/r³.
Equatorial field is opposite to dipole moment.
Use distance from centre O carefully: axial distances to charges are r - a and r + a.
Field lines never intersect because electric field cannot have two directions at one point.
Field lines are imaginary representation, not real physical threads or wires.
Section 13
Electric field at a point is the force per unit positive test charge placed at that point, E = F/q₀. It is a vector quantity and its direction is the direction of force on a positive test charge. A point charge Q produces an electric field E = (1/4πε₀)Q/r², directed radially outward for positive charge and radially inward for negative charge. Electric field lines help visualize direction and relative strength of electric field; they start from positive charges and end on negative charges, never intersect, and are closer where the field is stronger. An electric dipole consists of charges +q and -q separated by distance 2a, with dipole moment p = q × 2a directed from -q to +q. For a short dipole, axial field is (1/4πε₀)2p/r³ and equatorial field is (1/4πε₀)p/r³ opposite to p.
Section 14
Original exam-pattern questions with answers and short explanations. These are arranged by curriculum and difficulty, and they intentionally test different concepts instead of repeating the same numerical pattern.
Section 15
Each case study contains a short context and 4-5 linked questions with answers.
Section 16
Potential is built from electric field and work done per unit charge.
Capacitors store energy in electric fields between conductors.
Field symmetry is the key to applying Gauss law correctly.
Electric field inside conductors drives drift of charges.
Polarization of dielectrics depends on dipoles responding to electric field.
Sensors, capacitive touchscreens, electronics and electromagnetic devices all use field concepts.
If you are facing difficulty in electric field, electric field lines, dipole, axial field, equatorial field or NEET/JEE numerical questions, contact Kumar Sir for one-to-one online Physics classes.
The space around a charge where its influence is felt is the Electric Field.
Intensity ($\vec{E}$): Force per unit test charge.
📝 Doodle: Draw a small sun-like charge with rays going out!
For a charge $Q$ at distance $r$, the field is:
Net field is the Vector Sum of all individual fields.
$\vec{E}_{net} = \vec{E}_1 + \vec{E}_2 + … + \vec{E}_n$
When charges are spread over a line, surface, or volume:
Resolving $\vec{E}$ into $E_x, E_y, E_z$ components:
$\vec{E} = E_x\hat{i} + E_y\hat{j} + E_z\hat{k}$
Where $E_x = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0} \frac{qx}{r^3}$ etc. 📐 (Triangle Doodle)
It helps us understand how Forces are transmitted through space even without contact. It defines the electrical environment around a charge.
Imaginary smooth curves representing the field direction.
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JOIN TUTORIAL NOW ⚡Consider an electric dipole with charges -q and +q separated by 2a. We calculate electric field $E$ at point P on the equatorial line at distance r.
Step 1: Magnitude of fields $E_1$ and $E_2$ are equal:
Step 2: Resultant intensity $E$ is the sum of cosine components:
Substituting $\cos \theta = \frac{a}{(r^2 + a^2)^{1/2}}$:
For a Short Dipole ($r >> a$), the formula becomes:
$E = \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0} \frac{p}{r^3}$
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