You don't
The field lines for a positive charge are radial lines extending outward in all directions from the charge. The field lines indicate the direction of the electric field, pointing away from the positive charge. The field lines are more concentrated closer to the charge and spread out further away.
That is not correct. Electric field lines originate from positive charges and terminate on negative charges. In the case of a uniform electric field, the field lines run from the positive plate to the negative plate.
The electric field around a negative charge radiates outward, with field lines directed toward the charge. This means that a positive test charge placed in this field would be attracted toward the negative charge. The strength of the field decreases with distance from the negative charge.
always towards the charge
Yes, electric field lines point away from positive charges and towards negative charges. This convention helps illustrate the direction of the force that a positive test charge would experience if placed in the electric field.
The electric field lines are directed away from a positive charge and towards a negative charge so that at any point , the tangent to a field line gives the direction of electric field at that point.
A positive charge will move in the direction of the arrows on the electric field lines. Electric field lines show the direction a positive test charge would move if placed in the field.
Electric field lines go from positive charges to negative charges.
Yes, a charge placed in an electric field will experience a force and move in the direction of the electric field lines if it is positive, or opposite to the direction if the charge is negative. The force on the charge is proportional to the charge itself and the strength of the electric field at that location.
Field lines are visual representations used in physics to illustrate the direction of force acting on an object within a field, such as an electric or magnetic field. Field lines show the pathways that a small positive test charge would follow if placed in the field. The density of field lines indicates the strength of the field at different points.
positive
yes because they start from the positive charge and ends at the negative charge so closed path