Chapter 18 Electric Charge and Electric Field
18.4 Electric Field: Concept of a Field Revisited
Summary
- Describe a force field and calculate the strength of an electric field due to a point charge.
- Calculate the force exerted on a test charge by an electric field.
- Explain the relationship between electrical force (F) on a test charge and electrical field strength (E).
Contact forces, such as between a baseball and a bat, are explained on the small scale by the interaction of the charges in atoms and molecules in close proximity. They interact through forces that include the Coulomb force. Action at a distance is a force between objects that are not close enough for their atoms to “touch.” That is, they are separated by more than a few atomic diameters.
For example, a charged rubber comb attracts neutral bits of paper from a distance via the Coulomb force. It is very useful to think of an object being surrounded in space by a force field. The force field carries the force to another object (called a test object) some distance away.
Concept of a Field
A field is a way of conceptualizing and mapping the force that surrounds any object and acts on another object at a distance without apparent physical connection. For example, the gravitational field surrounding the earth (and all other masses) represents the gravitational force that would be experienced if another mass were placed at a given point within the field.
In the same way, the Coulomb force field surrounding any charge extends throughout space. Using Coulomb’s law,

To simplify things, we would prefer to have a field that depends only on
where
Since the test charge cancels, we see that
The electric field is thus seen to depend only on the charge
Example 1: Calculating the Electric Field of a Point Charge
Calculate the strength and direction of the electric field
Strategy
We can find the electric field created by a point charge by using the equation
Solution
Here
Discussion
This electric field strength is the same at any point 5.00 mm away from the charge
Example 2: Calculating the Force Exerted on a Point Charge by an Electric Field
What force does the electric field found in the previous example exert on a point charge of
Strategy
Since we know the electric field strength and the charge in the field, the force on that charge can be calculated using the definition of electric field
Solution
The magnitude of the force on a charge
Because
Discussion
The force is attractive, as expected for unlike charges. (The field was created by a positive charge and here acts on a negative charge.) The charges in this example are typical of common static electricity, and the modest attractive force obtained is similar to forces experienced in static cling and similar situations.
PhET Explorations: Electric Field of Dreams
Play ball! Add charges to the Field of Dreams and see how they react to the electric field. Turn on a background electric field and adjust the direction and magnitude.

Section Summary
- The electrostatic force field surrounding a charged object extends out into space in all directions.
- The electrostatic force exerted by a point charge on a test charge at a distance
depends on the charge of both charges, as well as the distance between the two. - The electric field
is defined to bewhere
is the Coulomb or electrostatic force exerted on a small positive test charge . has units of N/C. - The magnitude of the electric field
created by a point charge iswhere
is the distance from . The electric field is a vector and fields due to multiple charges add like vectors.
Conceptual Questions
1: Why must the test charge
2: Are the direction and magnitude of the Coulomb force unique at a given point in space? What about the electric field?
Problem Exercises
1: What is the magnitude and direction of an electric field that exerts a
2: What is the magnitude and direction of the force exerted on a
3: Calculate the magnitude of the electric field 2.00 m from a point charge of 5.00 mC (such as found on the terminal of a Van de Graaff).
4: (a) What magnitude point charge creates a 10,000 N/C electric field at a distance of 0.250 m? (b) How large is the field at 10.0 m?
5: Calculate the initial (from rest) acceleration of a proton in a
6: (a) Find the direction and magnitude of an electric field that exerts a
Glossary
- field
- a map of the amount and direction of a force acting on other objects, extending out into space
- point charge
- A charged particle, designated
, generating an electric field
- test charge
- A particle (designated
) with either a positive or negative charge set down within an electric field generated by a point charge
Problem Exercises
2:
4:
(a)
(b)
6:
(a) 300 N/C (east)
(b)