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Check Your Understanding What is the potential inside the metal sphere in [link] ?

V = k q r = ( 8.99 × 10 9 N · m 2 /C 2 ) ( −3.00 × 10 −9 C 5.00 × 10 −3 m ) = −5390 V; recall that the electric field inside a conductor is zero. Hence, any path from a point on the surface to any point in the interior will have an integrand of zero when calculating the change in potential, and thus the potential in the interior of the sphere is identical to that on the surface.

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The voltages in both of these examples could be measured with a meter that compares the measured potential with ground potential. Ground potential is often taken to be zero (instead of taking the potential at infinity to be zero). It is the potential difference between two points that is of importance, and very often there is a tacit assumption that some reference point, such as Earth or a very distant point, is at zero potential. As noted earlier, this is analogous to taking sea level as h = 0 when considering gravitational potential energy U g = m g h .

Systems of multiple point charges

Just as the electric field obeys a superposition principle, so does the electric potential. Consider a system consisting of N charges q 1 , q 2 , , q N . What is the net electric potential V at a space point P from these charges? Each of these charges is a source charge that produces its own electric potential at point P , independent of whatever other changes may be doing. Let V 1 , V 2 , , V N be the electric potentials at P produced by the charges q 1 , q 2 , , q N , respectively. Then, the net electric potential V P at that point is equal to the sum of these individual electric potentials. You can easily show this by calculating the potential energy of a test charge when you bring the test charge from the reference point at infinity to point P :

V P = V 1 + V 2 + + V N = 1 N V i .

Note that electric potential follows the same principle of superposition as electric field and electric potential energy. To show this more explicitly, note that a test charge q i at the point P in space has distances of r 1 , r 2 , , r N from the N charges fixed in space above, as shown in [link] . Using our formula for the potential of a point charge for each of these (assumed to be point) charges, we find that

V P = 1 N k q i r i = k 1 N q i r i .

Therefore, the electric potential energy of the test charge is

U P = q t V P = q t k 1 N q i r i ,

which is the same as the work to bring the test charge into the system, as found in the first section of the chapter.

The figure shows N charges located at different distances from a fixed point P.
Notation for direct distances from charges to a space point P .

The electric dipole

An electric dipole    is a system of two equal but opposite charges a fixed distance apart. This system is used to model many real-world systems, including atomic and molecular interactions. One of these systems is the water molecule, under certain circumstances. These circumstances are met inside a microwave oven, where electric fields with alternating directions make the water molecules change orientation. This vibration is the same as heat at the molecular level.

Electric potential of a dipole

Consider the dipole in [link] with the charge magnitude of q = 3.0 nC and separation distance d = 4.0 cm . What is the potential at the following locations in space? (a) (0, 0, 1.0 cm); (b) (0, 0, –5.0 cm); (c) (3.0 cm, 0, 2.0 cm).

The figure shows an electric dipole with two charges (3.0nC and -3.0nC) located 4.0cm apart on the z axis. The center of the dipole is at the origin and three other points are marked at (0, 0, 1.0 cm), (0, 0, –5.0 cm) and (3.0 cm, 0, 2.0 cm).
A general diagram of an electric dipole, and the notation for the distances from the individual charges to a point P in space.

Strategy

Apply V P = k 1 N q i r i to each of these three points.

Solution

  1. V P = k 1 N q i r i = ( 9.0 × 10 9 N · m 2 / C 2 ) ( 3.0 nC 0.010 m 3.0 nC 0.030 m ) = 1.8 × 10 3 V
  2. V P = k 1 N q i r i = ( 9.0 × 10 9 N · m 2 / C 2 ) ( 3.0 nC 0.070 m 3.0 nC 0.030 m ) = −5.1 × 10 2 V
  3. V P = k 1 N q i r i = ( 9.0 × 10 9 N · m 2 / C 2 ) ( 3.0 nC 0.030 m 3.0 nC 0.050 m ) = 3.6 × 10 2 V

Significance

Note that evaluating potential is significantly simpler than electric field, due to potential being a scalar instead of a vector.

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Practice Key Terms 2

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Source:  OpenStax, University physics volume 2. OpenStax CNX. Oct 06, 2016 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col12074/1.3
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