Yes, a charge placed in an electric field will experience a force in the direction of the field lines due to the interaction between the charge and the field. The charge will move along the field lines if it is free to do so.
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.
No, the direction of the electric force on a charge is along the electric field vector and not necessarily tangent to the field line. The force on a charge will be in the same direction as the electric field if the charge is positive, and opposite if the charge is negative.
The direction of the electric force on charge a in the figure is towards the right.
To determine the direction of the electric field, you can use a positive test charge. The direction of the electric field is the direction in which a positive test charge would move if placed in that field.
The trajectory of a charge in an electric field is determined by the direction and strength of the electric field. The charge will experience a force in the direction of the electric field, causing it to move along a path determined by the field's characteristics.
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.
No, the direction of the electric force on a charge is along the electric field vector and not necessarily tangent to the field line. The force on a charge will be in the same direction as the electric field if the charge is positive, and opposite if the charge is negative.
The direction of the electric force on charge a in the figure is towards the right.
To determine the direction of the electric field, you can use a positive test charge. The direction of the electric field is the direction in which a positive test charge would move if placed in that field.
The trajectory of a charge in an electric field is determined by the direction and strength of the electric field. The charge will experience a force in the direction of the electric field, causing it to move along a path determined by the field's characteristics.
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.
The direction of the electric field is opposite to that of the force if the charge is negative. This is because negative charges experience a force in the direction opposite to the electric field, while positive charges experience a force in the same direction as the electric field.
When a charge enters a uniform electric field, it will experience a force in the direction of the field if it's positive and in the opposite direction if it's negative. This force will cause the charge to accelerate in the direction of the field lines. The magnitude and direction of the acceleration will depend on the charge of the particle and the strength of the electric field.
In this case, the direction of the electric field is determined by the positive charge, pointing away from it.
It has plenty of direction. The direction of the electric field at any point in it is the direction of the force that would be felt by an infinitesimally small positive charge placed at that point.
To determine the direction of the electric field at a specific point, you can place a positive test charge at that point and observe the direction in which it experiences a force. The direction of the force on the positive test charge indicates the direction of the electric field at that point.
The electric field near a negative charge points radially inward towards the charge.