Class 12th Physics Chapter-2 Notes on Electrostatic Potential

ELECTROSTATIC POTENTIAL

(Study Material & Notes )


1. Why do we need Electrostatic Potential?

  • Electrostatic force is a conservative force.

  • For conservative forces, work done depends only on initial and final positions, not on the path.

  • Hence, we can define:

    • Electrostatic Potential Energy

    • Electrostatic Potential

This is similar to gravitational potential energy and gravitational potential.


2. Electrostatic Potential Energy

Definition

Electrostatic potential energy of a charge is the work done by an external force in bringing the charge from infinity to a given point in an electric field without acceleration.

Important Points

  • Test charge must be very small (so it does not disturb the field).

  • External force must be equal and opposite to electric force.

  • Work done is stored as potential energy.

Mathematical Expression

ΔU=Welectric

  • Only change in potential energy is physically meaningful.

  • Absolute value depends on the chosen reference point.


3. Reference Point for Potential Energy

  • Potential energy is defined up to an additive constant.

  • Convenient choice:

    U=0at infinity

This choice is universally used in electrostatics.


4. Electrostatic Potential

Definition (Most Important)

Electrostatic potential at a point is the work done by an external force in bringing a unit positive charge from infinity to that point without acceleration.

Symbol

  • Electrostatic potential → V

Mathematical Definition

V=Uq

or,

VPVR=WRPq


5. Physical Meaning of Electrostatic Potential

  • It represents the potential energy per unit charge.

  • It tells us how much work is required to bring a charge to a point.

  • Higher potential → more work needed for a positive charge.


6. Unit of Electrostatic Potential

SI Unit: Volt (V)

1Volt=1Joule per Coulomb

1V=1JC


7. Potential Difference

Definition

Potential difference between two points is the work done per unit charge in moving a test charge from one point to another.

Expression

VPVR=WRPq

Important Notes

  • Only potential difference is measurable.

  • Absolute potential has no physical meaning unless a reference is chosen.


8. Potential at Infinity

  • By convention:

    V()=0
  • Then,

V=Work done in bringing unit charge from infinity


9. Electrostatic Potential Due to a Point Charge

Consider a point charge Q at the origin.

Expression

V(r)=14πε0Qr

where:

  • r = distance from the charge

  • ε0 = permittivity of free space

Nature of Potential

  • If Q>0 → V>0

  • If Q<0 → V<0

Key Difference from Electric Field

Quantity Depends on
Electric Field 1r2
Potential 1r

10. Potential Due to a System of Charges

Principle Used

👉 Superposition Principle

Expression

For charges q1,q2,q3,...

V=14πε0(q1r1+q2r2+q3r3+)

  • Potential is a scalar, so algebraic sum is taken.

  • Easier to calculate than electric field.


11. Potential Due to a Dipole (Short Note – Pre-Equipotential)

For a dipole with moment p:

V=14πε0pcosθr2

Special Cases

  • Axial line: Potential is maximum

  • Equatorial plane: Potential = 0


12. Relation Between Potential and Work

W=qΔV

  • Positive charge moves naturally from higher to lower potential.

  • Negative charge moves from lower to higher potential.


13. Important Exam Points (Very High Yield)

  • Electrostatic potential is a scalar quantity

  • Defined only for conservative fields

  • Depends on position, not path

  • Potential can be positive, negative, or zero

  • Easier to calculate than electric field


This material is directly aligned with NCERT Class 12 Physics, suitable for CBSE Board, NEET, and JEE (conceptual) preparation.

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