Electric Field of a Point Charge Calculator

Calculate electric field E = kQ/r² for single or multiple point charges. Includes superposition, dielectric media, and field vs distance tables.

About the Electric Field of a Point Charge Calculator

The electric field of a point charge Q at distance r is given by Coulomb's law: E = kQ/r², where k = 8.988 × 10⁹ N·m²/C² is Coulomb's constant. The field points radially outward from positive charges and inward toward negative charges, and falls off as the inverse square of distance.

In a dielectric medium with relative permittivity εᵣ, the field is reduced by that factor: E = kQ/(εᵣr²). For example, water (εᵣ ≈ 80) reduces the electric field 80× compared to vacuum — which is why ionic compounds dissolve in water but not in nonpolar solvents.

For multiple charges, the superposition principle holds: the total field at any point is the vector sum of the fields from each individual charge. This calculator handles both single-charge calculations (with field vs distance tables) and multi-charge superposition (with vector decomposition and individual contributions). Check the example with realistic values before reporting. It is most useful when you need both the scalar potential view and the vector-field view of the same charge configuration.

Why Use This Electric Field of a Point Charge Calculator?

Coulomb's law is fundamental to electrostatics, but computing fields for multiple charges involves vector decomposition, unit conversions (µC, nC, nm, cm), and dielectric corrections. The superposition principle requires summing x and y components separately before finding the resultant — tedious and error-prone by hand.

This calculator handles all conversions, computes both field and potential, provides field vs distance tables for analysis, and supports arbitrary multi-charge arrangements with individual contribution breakdowns. It serves physics students, electrical engineers, and researchers.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Choose single charge or multi-charge (superposition) mode.
  2. Select the surrounding medium (vacuum, air, water, etc.) or enter a custom dielectric constant.
  3. For single charge: enter the charge value in coulombs and the distance with units.
  4. For multiple charges: enter comma-separated charge values and their x, y positions, plus the observer location.
  5. Use presets for common scenarios (proton at 1 nm, µC at 1 m, etc.).
  6. Review the electric field magnitude, potential, and comparison tables.

Formula

E = kQ/(εᵣr²). V = kQ/(εᵣr). k = 1/(4πε₀) = 8.988×10⁹ N·m²/C². Superposition: E_total = Σ Eᵢ (vector sum). V_total = Σ Vᵢ (scalar sum).

Example Calculation

Result: E = 899.0 kV/m, V = 89.9 kV

E = (8.988×10⁹)(1×10⁻⁶)/(0.1²) = 8.988×10⁵ V/m = 899.0 kV/m. V = (8.988×10⁹)(1×10⁻⁶)/(0.1) = 89,876 V ≈ 89.9 kV.

Tips & Best Practices

Coulomb's Law and the Electric Field

Coulomb's law (1785) states that the force between two point charges is F = kQ₁Q₂/r², directed along the line joining them — attractive for opposite charges, repulsive for like charges. The electric field concept, introduced by Faraday and formalized by Maxwell, replaces "action at a distance" with a field that exists in space: E = F/q = kQ/r². Any other charge q placed in this field experiences a force F = qE.

The electric field is one of the four components of the electromagnetic field tensor in special relativity. What appears as a purely electric field in one reference frame can appear as a combination of electric and magnetic fields in another — electric and magnetic fields are two aspects of the same fundamental force.

Superposition and Multi-Charge Systems

The superposition principle is exact in classical electrodynamics (Maxwell's equations are linear). For N point charges, E_total(r) = Σ (k·Qᵢ/rᵢ²)·r̂ᵢ. This allows computing the field of any charge distribution by summing contributions.

Important configurations include: the dipole (±Q separated by d, field ∝ 1/r³ at large r), the quadrupole (field ∝ 1/r⁴), and continuous charge distributions (line, surface, volume charges integrated via calculus). For highly symmetric distributions, Gauss's law (∮E·dA = Q_enc/ε₀) provides a faster route.

Applications in Technology

Electric field calculations are central to: capacitor design (uniform field between parallel plates: E = V/d), electrostatic precipitators (particle charging and collection), semiconductor device physics (depletion regions in p-n junctions), high-voltage engineering (breakdown analysis), and biological electroporation (cell membrane permeabilization at ~1 V/3 nm ≈ 0.3 GV/m). Understanding the field distribution is essential for all these applications.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between electric field and electric potential?

The electric field E (V/m) is a vector that describes the force per unit charge: F = qE. The electric potential V (volts) is a scalar that describes the energy per unit charge: U = qV. One is the gradient of the other: E = −∇V. Multiple charges can produce zero net field but nonzero potential, or vice versa.

Does the formula apply inside a dielectric material?

The formula E = kQ/(εᵣr²) gives the macroscopic field in a linear, isotropic dielectric. It accounts for the screening effect of bound charge polarization in the medium. This is valid for uniform dielectrics but not at interfaces between different media.

When does the point charge model break down?

When the distance r is comparable to the physical size of the charged object. For an electron (point-like as far as measured: <10⁻¹⁸ m), the formula applies at any distance. For a conducting sphere of radius R, the formula applies for r > R. Inside the conductor, E = 0.

Can the superposition handle arbitrary charge configurations?

Yes — any 2D arrangement of point charges can be entered. For 3D problems, reduce to a 2D cross-section or project along one axis. The calculator computes vector components Ex and Ey, then the magnitude and direction of the resultant field.

Why does water reduce the electric field by 80×?

Water molecules are polar (permanent dipole moment). In an external field, they align to partially cancel it. This strong dielectric screening (εᵣ ≈ 80) dramatically weakens Coulombic interactions between ions, which is why NaCl dissociates into Na⁺ and Cl⁻ in water but not in air.

What is the field at the midpoint of a dipole?

For charges +Q at (−d/2, 0) and −Q at (+d/2, 0), the field at the origin points in the −x direction with magnitude E = 2kQ/((d/2)²)/εᵣ = 8kQ/(d²εᵣ). The potential at the midpoint is zero by symmetry (equal and opposite contributions).

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