Inside a conductor, it's zero.
it is the magnetic field not the electric field which accelerates the ion inside the dees
The electric FIELD inside a charged hollow CONDUCTOR is zero.
In the electric field inside the dielectric (or insulating) medium separating the two plates
An electron, being negatively charged, will move towards positively charged plates.
It's the electric field.
The electric field pattern is radial.
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.
yes the space around a electrically charged object is known as electric field......
The electric field outside the shell is the same as it would be if all the charge of the shell was concentrated as a point charge in the centre of the shell.
Matter becomes charged by electric charges, static electricity and an electric field.
Electromagnetic field. An electric field.
Yes. The static electric field inside a charged conductor is zero, no matter what the voltage is between the conductor and the rest of the world.