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  • - Let's talk about Electric Potential V.

  • This is confusing, this is one of,

  • if not the most confusing ideas in all of physics.

  • For one it sounds just like Electric Potential energy

  • but it's not, this is different,

  • it's related to Electric Potential energy

  • but the Electric Potential V is different

  • from Electric Potential energy.

  • That was a poor choice of naming.

  • And the other reason it's confusing

  • is that Electric Potential V is a number, just a number,

  • that's it, associated with points in space.

  • So it's abstract, this is an abstract idea,

  • you can't go hold Electric Potential in your hand,

  • it's a number, an abstract number at every point in space.

  • Here is points in space,

  • I just put circles around empty spots on the screen,

  • there's like nothing here,

  • I just put circles here,

  • these are circles around empty points in space,

  • just so we can talk about them explicitly.

  • And, well, if there was no charge around,

  • if you literally had an empty universe,

  • the V value at every point

  • in this universe would be zero.

  • It'd be zero there, it'd be zero over here,

  • the number associated with

  • every point in space would be zero.

  • That'd be boring, and useless.

  • How do we make it so that the V value,

  • the Electric Potential value, is not zero?

  • We just stick a charge in here,

  • just stick a big ol' positive Q

  • at some point in space over here,

  • take a big ol' charge and we'll stick it right there.

  • Now, points in space around this charge

  • will have a V value that's non-zero,

  • and they'll be big if you're near this Q,

  • so the V values around here are gonna be really big,

  • and then the V values way out here will be smaller,

  • the further way you go the smaller it gets.

  • And why do we care?

  • Who cares?

  • The reason we care is this.

  • The units of Electric Potential are Joules per Coulomb,

  • so Electric Potential has units of Joules per Coulomb,

  • that gives you a hint of why you should care,

  • we care about Joules, Joules are energy

  • so something about energy, that's useful,

  • you can get work out of that

  • or can turn it to Kinetic energy.

  • And Joules per Coulomb, that let's you know,

  • alright, well, if this point over here

  • happened to have, say 100 Joules per Coulomb,

  • let's say the V value at this point in space

  • happened to be 100 Joules per Coulomb,

  • what that means is,

  • remember there's nothing there,

  • but if there was something there,

  • if we happened to take,

  • say we had a positive two Coulomb charge

  • and we took that charge and we put it there

  • at that empty point in space,

  • before we put it there the V value was 100,

  • when we stick it here, who cares?

  • Why do we care about this 100 value?

  • 'Cause look at it, it's 100 Joules per Coulomb,

  • that's what V, the Electric Potential, is telling us.

  • So if it's 100 Joules per Coulomb

  • and I stick two Coulombs there,

  • how many Joules of energy do you think it's gonna have?

  • It'll have 200.

  • And that's the key,

  • that's why we care about Electric Potential

  • 'cause it let's us find Electric Potential energy,

  • either PE, sometimes people

  • write Electric Potential energy as U.

  • So the formula is just Q,

  • you take the Q that you sticked at that point in space,

  • in this case it was two Coulombs.

  • Take whatever Q there is,

  • multiply it by the value of the Electric Potential

  • and that tells you how many Joules there would be

  • for the charges in that region,

  • so this Electric Potential energy is between

  • these two charges here,

  • the charge that created the V

  • and the charge that you sticked at that point,

  • and the V is a quick way to figure out

  • how much Potential energy, Electric Potential energy

  • there will be.

  • So in other words, in this case,

  • since I have two Coulombs there,

  • I take my two Coulombs

  • and I multiply by 100 Joules per Coulomb

  • 'cause that's the V value,

  • and I get that there are 200 Joules

  • of Potential energy now stored between these charges.

  • So that's why we care about Electric Potential V,

  • it's a way to figure out the Electric Potential energy

  • for a charge that's placed at that point in space

  • that has that V value.

  • But, how do you get this V value?

  • If I hadn't given you the 100 Joules per Coulomb

  • we wouldn't have been able to figure this out,

  • we need a way to figure out the V value

  • at points in space based on the charges creating them,

  • 'cause charges create the V value.

  • There's a formula for it,

  • and the formula says that the V, Electric Potential,

  • created by point charges equals K,

  • K is the Electric constant 9 times 10 to the ninth,

  • and it has units of

  • Newton meter squared per Coulomb squared,

  • that's always K.

  • You take that K and you multiply by

  • the charge that's creating the V value,

  • so in this case is this Q,

  • this positive Q here, whatever Q it is

  • creating the V value that you wanna find,

  • and that's key,

  • if you plug in five Coulombs here

  • you're finding the V created by that five Coulombs,

  • if you plug in negative three Coulombs

  • you'll find the V created by the negative three Coulombs,

  • sometimes there's problems

  • with multiple charges in it, like this one,

  • and this Q gotta be the charge creating this V,

  • not the charge you placed at that point in space,

  • and I'll put the two Coulombs up here,

  • but the charge creating the V value that I wanna find.

  • And then you divide by the distance,

  • so I divide by the distance between

  • this charge and the point in space

  • that I wanna figure out the V value at.

  • Some people call this the radius,

  • I don't like calling it radius,

  • makes this sound like there has to be a circle,

  • it doesn't really have to be a circle,

  • this r would be the distance

  • from this point of charge creating this V value

  • to the point in space where I wanna determine the V value,

  • that's r.

  • So this is r.

  • So how do we determine this?

  • Let me just give you some numbers,

  • let's say the charge we stuck here was one nanoCoulomb,

  • nano is 10 to the negative ninth,

  • so let's say that was one nanoCoulomb.

  • And let's say the distance from this charge

  • to this point in space was,

  • let's say it was nine centimeters.

  • And I wanna know what's the V value,

  • well I can solve for it now,

  • we got our formula, the V would equal,

  • alright my K is 9, always, times 10 to the ninth,

  • and it's Newtons meter squared per Coulomb squared,

  • and then I multiply by my charge,

  • and I told you that the charge here was

  • 10 to the negative ninth Coulombs,

  • and my distance, I divide by the r value

  • and the r value is nine centimeters,

  • but be careful, everything's gotta be in terms of meters,

  • kilograms and seconds

  • when you're doing physics with constants.

  • Look at this is in terms of meters,

  • so I've got to use meters here,

  • so nine centimeters is .09 meters.

  • And if I multiply all this out

  • what you'll get is, 10 to the negative ninth

  • cancels this 10 to the ninth,

  • the powers are 10, these just go away,

  • and then I have nine divided by .09,

  • that gets equal 100.

  • So I chose this so that

  • we got the same answer down there.

  • Okay, 100 Joules per Coulomb,

  • you might be like, where the Joules comes from?

  • And how is this Joules per Coulomb?

  • Well let's look at it,

  • if we took, look at,

  • one of these meters cancels one of these meters,

  • and one of these Coulombs cancels one of those Coulombs,

  • what are we left with?

  • We're left with Newton times meter over Coulomb,

  • but Newton times meter, that's force times distance,

  • that's Joules, that's where we get Joules per Coulomb.

  • So this really does give us the number of Joules

  • there would be at a point in space

  • per Coulomb of charge that you put there.

  • And it works for any point,

  • you pick any point,

  • if I picked a point twice as close,

  • it's half as far away, let's say some point over here,

  • let's say this r value here was only 4.5 centimeters,

  • well I'm dividing this by r,

  • so if the r is half as big this point over here

  • will have a V value of 200 Joules per Coulomb

  • and the closer I get, if I went even closer,

  • if I went to a point that was three centimeters away,

  • well this is a third as much as this other distance,

  • so if I'm only dividing by a third as much distance

  • as you get three times the result

  • 'cause r is not squared, it's just r.

  • So at this point,

  • we'll have a V value of 300 Joules per Coulomb.

  • This tells me, if I wanted to get

  • a charge that have a whole bunch of Potential energy,

  • I should put that thing nearby,

  • I should stick it over here,

  • this will give me a lot of Potential energy.

  • Not quite as much, even less,

  • the further I put my charge

  • the less Potential energy it will have.

  • There will be no Potential energy until there is a charge,

  • there'll just be Electric Potential.

  • But once you place another charge in that region

  • to go with the first one,

  • then you'll have Electric Potential energy

  • and this will be a way to find it,

  • Q times the V that you get out of this calculation.

  • You gotta be careful though,

  • sometimes people get sloppy,

  • and V looks, you know,

  • we use V for Electric Potential

  • and we use V for Voltage,

  • what's the difference?

  • Are they the same?

  • Hmmm, not quite.

  • Sometimes you can treat them as the same

  • and you don't get into trouble,

  • but sometimes you do and messes you up.

  • Voltage is a, technically a change

  • in Electric Potential between two points,

  • this is the difference in Electric Potential

  • between two points in space,

  • so it's got the same units

  • 'cause the change in Electric Potential

  • still gonna have units of Joule per Coulomb,

  • it's just, when it's a change in

  • we give this a new title,

  • we call the Joule per Coulomb unit a Volt.

  • So Joules per Coulomb are Volts,

  • but the word Voltage specifically refers

  • to a difference in Electric Potential,

  • what am I talking about?

  • Well, look at, this point is 300 Joules per Coulomb,

  • this point over here 100 Joules per Coulomb,

  • so the delta V, if I were to take

  • delta V between these two points right here

  • and I ask, what's the difference in V?

  • Well the difference in V is 200,

  • 200 Joules per Coulomb,

  • that means the Voltage

  • between those two points in space is 200 Volts,

  • that's what it means.

  • So, when you're talking about a difference

  • in Electric Potential between two points in space

  • we call it a Voltage,

  • when you're talking about

  • just the Electric Potential value at one point in space

  • we call it the Electric Potential,

  • and that's how they're related.

- Let's talk about Electric Potential V.

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