yes.
The induced electric field tends to oppose the change in magnetic flux that causes it, in accordance with Faraday's law of electromagnetic induction. This conservative nature of the induced electric field ensures that the total electromagnetic field obeys the principle of conservation of energy. This property is fundamental for understanding electromagnetic phenomena and plays a crucial role in various applications, such as transformers and electric generators.
Yes, the electric force is a conservative force.
The curl of an electric field is zero because electric fields are conservative, meaning the work done by the field on a charge moving around a closed path is zero. This implies that the circulation of the electric field around any closed loop is zero, leading to a curl of zero.
Whenever there is a certain type of force, one that fulfills certain conditions (called a "conservative force") - such as a magnetic field, an electric field, or a gravitational field - there is an associated potential energy.
it is not a conservative feild....it is a non conservative feild
no electric field is not a potential field .ELECTRIC FIELD IS A SCALAR QUANTITY WHERE AS POTENTIAL IS THE VECTOR QUANTITY. NO SCALAR QUANTITY HAS A FIELD SO THERE IS NO RELATION BETWEEN ELECTRIC FIELD AND POTENTIAL OR IN OTHER WORD POTENTIAL HAS NO FIELD <<>> An electric field is a vector field, because it has magnitude and direction. A pair of charged parallel plates has an electric field between them directed from the negative to the positive plate. The electric field is the gradient of the potential, which is another field but a scalar one. A field is just a quantity with a value that depends on positon. The potential is measured in volts and if one plate is grounded and the other at positive potential V, the potential rises from zero to V as the position changes from the lower plate to the top one.
The net electric field inside a dielectric decreases due to polarization. The external electric field polarizes the dielectric and an electric field is produced due to this polarization. This internal electric field will be opposite to the external electric field and therefore the net electric field inside the dielectric will be less.
A vector field is considered conservative when its curl is zero.
for apex its: a quantum field, a gravitational field
Yes, the magnetic field is a non-conservative field. This means that the work done by a magnetic field on a charged particle moving in a closed path is generally not zero, unlike a conservative field where work done in a closed path is zero.
The electric field equation describes the strength and direction of the electric field at a point in space. Voltage, on the other hand, is a measure of the electric potential difference between two points in an electric field. The relationship between the electric field equation and voltage is that the electric field is related to the gradient of the voltage. In other words, the electric field is the negative gradient of the voltage.
It's the electric field.