A point charge Q is kept on equatorial position of an electric dipole of dipole moment p at a distance R as shown in the figure electric potential at the centre of the dipole is
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A point charge Q is kept on equatorial position of an electric dipole of dipole moment P at a distance R as shown in the figure electric potential at the center of the dipole is
. p/4πE0r2
. zero
. p/4πE0r
.p/4πE0r + p/4πE0r
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A point charge Q is kept on equatorial position of an electric dipole of dipole moment P at a distance R as shown in the figure electric potential at the center of the dipole is,
- p/4πE0r2.
- zero.
- p/4πE0r.
- p/4πE0r + p/4πE0r.
What is the electric potential due to an electric dipole at an equatorial point?
- The electric potential due to a dipole at its equatorial point is zero.
What is the electric potential due to a point charge?
- Electric potential of a point charge is V=kQ/r V = k Q / r .
- Electric potential is a scalar, and electric field is a vector.
- Addition of voltages as numbers gives the voltage due to a combination of point charges, whereas addition of individual fields as vectors gives the total electric field.
What is dipole moment p?
- For an electric dipole we define a new vector, called the electric dipole moment.
- The magnitude of the dipole moment vector p is the magnitude of the charge q times the distance d between them, p = qd.
- The vector points from the negative towards the positive charge.
Learn more about dipole moment here,
https://brainly.in/question/531564?msp_poc_exp=5
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