Potential due to a System of Charges & Equipotential Surfaces
(Class 12 Physics – NCERT Notes)
1. Recap: Electrostatic Potential
Electrostatic potential (V) at a point is defined as:
The work done by an external agent in bringing a unit positive test charge from infinity to that point, without acceleration.
-
SI unit: volt (V)
-
1 volt = 1 joule / coulomb
2. Potential Due to a System of Charges
What is a system of charges?
A system of charges consists of two or more point charges placed at different positions in space.
Principle Used: Superposition Principle
The electrostatic potential due to a system of charges is the algebraic sum of potentials due to individual charges.
⚠️ Important:
-
Potential is a scalar quantity
-
So, we add directly, not vectorially
Formula: Potential at a Point Due to n Charges
Suppose there are charges
at distances
from a point P.
Key Points to Remember
-
Potential may be positive, negative, or zero
-
Zero potential does not mean zero electric field
-
Reference potential is usually taken as zero at infinity
Special Cases
-
Like charges → potentials add up
-
Unlike charges → potentials may cancel
-
At midpoint of equal and opposite charges → potential can be zero
3. Potential Due to a Continuous Charge Distribution
If charge is continuously distributed (line, surface, or volume):
Where:
-
= small charge element
-
= distance of from the point
4. Equipotential Surfaces
Definition
An equipotential surface is a surface on which the electric potential is same at every point.
Important Properties of Equipotential Surfaces
-
No work is done in moving a charge along an equipotential surface
-
Electric field is always perpendicular to equipotential surfaces
-
If it were not, work would be done → contradiction
-
-
Equipotential surfaces never intersect
-
One point cannot have two different potentials
-
-
Closer surfaces → stronger electric field
5. Equipotential Surfaces for Different Charge Configurations
(a) Point Charge
-
Shape: Concentric spheres
-
Center: at the charge
-
Potential depends only on distance
(b) Uniform Electric Field
-
Shape: Parallel planes
-
Perpendicular to direction of field
(c) Electric Dipole
-
Complex curved surfaces
-
Symmetric about dipole axis
-
Equatorial plane is an equipotential surface with zero potential
6. Relation Between Electric Field and Potential
Electric field is the negative gradient of potential:
Meaning
-
Electric field points in the direction of maximum decrease of potential
-
Greater the rate of change of potential → stronger the field
7. Comparison: Electric Field vs Potential
| Electric Field | Electric Potential |
|---|---|
| Vector quantity | Scalar quantity |
| Unit: N/C | Unit: Volt |
| Direction matters | No direction |
| Causes force | Represents energy per charge |
8. Common Exam Mistakes (Very Important ⚠️)
-
❌ Adding potentials vectorially
-
❌ Saying work is done on equipotential surface
-
❌ Confusing zero potential with zero field
-
❌ Forgetting reference potential (usually infinity)
9. NCERT-Style One-Line Answers
-
Potential due to a system of charges is the algebraic sum of individual potentials.
-
Equipotential surfaces are always perpendicular to electric field lines.
-
Work done on an equipotential surface is zero.
-
Electric field is directed from higher to lower potential.
10. Numerical Tip for Boards
Always:
-
Write formula first
-
Mention reference potential
-
Keep sign of charge carefully
-
Use SI units
