An electric field can be regarded as the sphere of influence of an
electrically charged object. Anything that has an electrical charge will
affect, and be affected by, other charged bodies. If two charged
objects are placed sufficiently close to one another, each will
experience a measureable force acting upon it. The field is
theoretically infinite in extent, but its magnitude diminishes with
distance from the source according to the inverse square law. This means
that if the distance is doubled, the strength of the field is divided
by four, and at three times the distance, the strength is divided by
nine, and so on; the field therefore becomes negligible at large
distances.
Since an electric charge can be positive or negative,
the electric field is a vector field, which means that it has a
direction as well as a magnitude. Two electrically charged objects will
experience a repulsive force if they have the same type of charge and an
attractive force if they have different types of charge. The force
experienced by a charged object in an electric field can be calculated
as F = Eq, where F is the force in Newtons, E is the electric field in
volts per meter (v/m) and q is the charge in Coulombs. This equation can
be rearranged to give the strength of the field, E, in volts per meter:
E = F/q. These examples apply to small, point-like, objects; for more
complex, or multiple, charged bodies, the calculations are more
complicated.
The direction of an electric field is defined as the direction in
which the electric force would be felt by an object with a positive
charge placed in the field. Thus, the field would point away from a
positive charge and toward a negative charge, since like charges repel
and unlike charges attract. In the case of two bodies with the same type
of charge, each would experience a force — calculable by the F = Eq
equation — directed away from the other object. Conversely, for two
oppositely charged bodies, each would experience a force directed toward
the other object.
An electric field line can be drawn with an arrow pointing away from a
positive charge and pointing toward a negative charge. Thus, a
positively charged object would be depicted with field lines pointing
away from it in all directions, and a negatively charged object with
field lines converging upon it. This, however, is just a convention and
does not indicate that there is anything physical pointing in a
particular direction.
The concept of an electric field as described above is part of
“classical” physics. The classical description works well for everyday
applications, but does not explain what is actually happening when
charged objects attract or repel one another. A branch of quantum theory
known as quantum electrodynamics (QED), attempts to do this in terms of
the exchange of photons, the carriers of the electromagnetic force.
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