how electrostatic force is conservative force
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A conservative force is a force with the property that the total work done in moving a particle between two points is independent of the taken path. ... Other examples of conservative forces are: force in elastic spring, electrostatic force between two electric charges, and magnetic force between two magnetic poles.
That is, conservative forces are path-independent. The electrostatic force is conservative not because of the inverse square law, but because the force is radially symmetric. ... This works because the force is radially symmetric, that is, it does not depend on θ.
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