Electric Charges and Fields Class 12 Physics Chapter 1 Notes | NCERT Chapter 1 PDF

Electric Charges and Fields

Class 12 Physics — Chapter 1 | NCERT Complete Notes

Exam Write-Ready • Print Friendly • Full Syllabus

1. Electric Charge — Basics

Electric Charge (q or Q): Physical property of matter that causes it to experience force in an electromagnetic field. SI unit = Coulomb (C).

Types of Charges

  • Positive (+): Appears on glass rod rubbed with silk
  • Negative (−): Appears on ebonite rod rubbed with fur
Fundamental Law: Like charges repel, unlike charges attract.
Sure Test of Electrification: Repulsion is the only sure test. Attraction can occur between charged & uncharged body (induction), but repulsion means both bodies are charged.

Methods of Charging

  1. Friction: Rubbing two bodies transfers electrons
  2. Conduction: Direct contact transfers charge
  3. Induction: Charging without contact
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Glass rod + silk, Ebonite rod + fur, Attraction & Repulsion)_LINK_HERE

2. Properties of Electric Charge 5 MARKS

(A) Additivity

  • Charges add algebraically
  • Qtotal = q1 + q2 + q3 + …
  • Example: (+3C) + (−5C) + (+2C) = 0 C → Neutral system

(B) Conservation of Charge

  • Charge can neither be created nor destroyed
  • Only transferred from one body to another
  • Total charge of isolated system remains constant
  • Example: Glass (+) + Silk (−) = 0 (before & after rubbing)

(C) Quantization of Charge

q = ±ne    where n = 1, 2, 3, …
e = elementary charge = 1.6 × 10−19 C
  • Charge exists only in integer multiples of e
  • Macroscopically, n is very large → charge appears continuous
  • Example: Charge −4.8 × 10−19 C means n = 3 excess electrons
Exam Tip: Quantization, Conservation & Additivity are frequently asked as 3-mark or 5-mark questions. Write definition + formula + example for full marks.

3. Conductors, Insulators & Semiconductors

Property Conductors Insulators Semiconductors
Free electrons Very large Negligible Moderate
Conductivity Very high Very low Intermediate
Resistivity 10−8 Ωm 108–1016 Ωm 10−5–106 Ωm
Examples Cu, Ag, Al, Fe, graphite Glass, rubber, plastic, mica Si, Ge, GaAs
Temp effect Conductivity ↓ No change Conductivity ↑
Point to Remember: Insulators can be charged — charge just cannot flow through them. Charge stays at the place where it is given.

4. Charging by Induction 3 MARKS

Induction: Process of charging a neutral body by bringing a charged body near it (without contact), then grounding it, and removing the ground.

Steps to Charge Positively by Induction (using −vely charged rod)

  1. Bring −vely charged rod near neutral conductor → electrons repel to far side
  2. Ground the conductor (touch with finger) while rod is near → excess electrons escape to earth
  3. Remove the ground first → conductor loses electrons
  4. Remove the rod → conductor has net positive charge
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Charging by Induction – 4 steps showing rod, sphere, grounding, net charge)_LINK_HERE

Key Points

  • No contact between charging body and body being charged
  • Induced charge is opposite in nature to inducing charge
  • Magnitude of induced charge = magnitude of inducing charge
  • Original charge on inducing body does not change
  • Works best with conductors
Application: Lightning conductors on buildings work on induction. Charged cloud induces opposite charge on pointed conductor → corona discharge neutralizes cloud safely.

5. Coulomb’s Law MOST IMP

Statement

  • Force between two point charges is directly proportional to product of their magnitudes
  • Inversely proportional to square of distance between them
  • Acts along line joining the two charges
F = k |q1q2| / r2
k = 1/4πε0 = 9 × 109 N m2 C−2
ε0 = 8.854 × 10−12 C2 N−1 m−2

Vector Form

F⃗12 = (1/4πε0) · (q1q2/r2) · r̂12
F⃗12 = Force on q1 due to q2
12 = unit vector from q2 to q1
q1q2 > 0 → Repulsion  |  q1q2 < 0 → Attraction
Newton’s Third Law: F⃗12 = −F⃗21 (equal & opposite)

Coulomb’s Law in a Medium

Fmedium = Fvacuum / εr
εr = relative permittivity (dielectric constant)
ε = ε0εr = absolute permittivity of medium

Coulomb vs Gravitation

Feature Coulomb Force Gravitational Force
Nature Attractive or Repulsive Only Attractive
Constant k = 9 × 109 (very large) G = 6.67 × 10−11 (very small)
Depends on Charge (can be + or −) Mass (always +)
Medium Depends on εr Independent of medium
Relative strength Electrostatic force ≈ 1039 times stronger than gravity
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Two point charges q1 and q2 with distance r, force vectors F12 and F21)_LINK_HERE

6. Principle of Superposition IMPORTANT

Statement: Total force on any charge due to a group of charges = vector sum of individual forces exerted by each charge, taken one at a time.
F⃗1 = F⃗12 + F⃗13 + F⃗14 + … + F⃗1n
F⃗1 = Σ(i=2 to n) F⃗1i
  • Force between any two charges is not affected by presence of other charges
  • Each pair interacts as if others don’t exist
  • Valid because Coulomb’s force is linear
Problem Solving Tip: For 3 charges at corners of equilateral triangle → calculate two forces, find angle between them (60°), use vector addition formula: Fnet = √(F12 + F22 + 2F1F2cosθ)
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Three charges at equilateral triangle corners, force vectors on one charge, resultant)_LINK_HERE

7. Electric Field MOST IMP

Electric Field Intensity (E): Electrostatic force per unit positive test charge placed at that point.
E⃗ = F⃗/q0    (q0 → 0)
SI Unit: N/C or V/m
Dimensions: [MLT−3A−1]

Why q0 → 0?

  • Large test charge would disturb original charge distribution
  • Infinitesimally small q0 ensures it doesn’t alter the field being measured

Electric Field due to Point Charge

E = (1/4πε0) · |q|/r2
Direction: Radially outward (+q), Radially inward (−q)

Vector Form

E⃗ = (1/4πε0) · (q/r2) · r̂
r̂ = unit vector from source charge to field point

Superposition for Electric Field

E⃗ = E⃗1 + E⃗2 + E⃗3 + … + E⃗n
E⃗i = (1/4πε0) · (qi/ri2) · r̂i
Physical Significance: Electric field exists independently of test charge. It carries energy & momentum. It tells the force per unit charge any charge would experience at that point.
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Point charge +q with radial field lines outward, -q with field lines inward)_LINK_HERE

8. Electric Field Lines 3 MARKS

Definition: Imaginary curve drawn through space such that tangent at any point gives direction of electric field vector at that point.

Properties (Very Important for Exams)

  1. Originate from +ve charges, terminate on −ve charges
  2. Tangent at any point = direction of E at that point
  3. Never intersect each other (would imply two directions of E at one point → impossible)
  4. Density of lines ∝ strength of E (closer lines = stronger field)
  5. Meet conductor surface at 90° (perpendicular)
  6. Never form closed loops in electrostatics (unlike magnetic field lines)

Field Line Patterns

Configuration Pattern Special Feature
Single +ve charge Radial outward Spread out with distance
Single −ve charge Radial inward Converge toward charge
Two +ve charges Repel each other Neutral point at midpoint (E = 0)
Dipole (+q & −q) Curved from + to − Symmetric pattern
Parallel plates Parallel, equally spaced Uniform E field
Remember: Number of field lines leaving a charge is proportional to magnitude of charge. +2q has twice as many lines as +q.
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Field line patterns – point charge, two like charges, dipole, parallel plates)_LINK_HERE

9. Electric Dipole 5 MARKS

Electric Dipole: Two equal & opposite charges (+q and −q) separated by small distance 2a.

Dipole Moment

p⃗ = q × 2a⃗
Magnitude: p = q × 2a
Direction: From −q to +q
SI Unit: C·m (or Debye; 1 D = 3.336 × 10−30 C·m)

Electric Field on Axial Line (End-on Position)

Eaxial = (1/4πε0) · 2pr / (r2 − a2)2
For r >> a: Eaxial ≈ (1/4πε0) · 2p/r3
Direction: Parallel to p⃗

Electric Field on Equatorial Line (Broadside-on)

Eeq = (1/4πε0) · p / (r2 + a2)3/2
For r >> a: Eeq ≈ (1/4πε0) · p/r3
Direction: Antiparallel to p⃗

Axial vs Equatorial Comparison

Property Axial Equatorial
Magnitude (r >> a) E = 2kp/r3 E = kp/r3
Ratio Eaxial = 2 × Eequatorial
Direction Parallel to p⃗ Antiparallel to p⃗

General Expression (Short Dipole, r >> a)

Er = (1/4πε0) · 2p cosθ/r3 Eθ = (1/4πε0) · p sinθ/r3
Enet = (1/4πε0) · (p/r3) √(3cos2θ + 1)
For short dipole: E ∝ 1/r3 (not 1/r2 like point charge). Faster fall-off because opposite charges partially cancel each other’s field.
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Dipole with +q and -q, distance 2a, dipole moment vector p, axial and equatorial lines)_LINK_HERE

10. Dipole in Uniform External Electric Field 5 MARKS

Forces on Dipole

  • Force on +q: F⃗+ = +qE⃗
  • Force on −q: F⃗ = −qE⃗
  • Net Force = 0 (equal & opposite)
  • But Net Torque ≠ 0 (forces act at different points)

Torque on Dipole

τ⃗ = p⃗ × E⃗
Magnitude: τ = pE sinθ
θ = angle between p⃗ and E⃗

Torque at Different Orientations

θ Torque State
0° (parallel) τ = 0 Stable Equilibrium
90° (perpendicular) τ = pE (max) Maximum torque
180° (antiparallel) τ = 0 Unstable Equilibrium

Potential Energy of Dipole

U = −pE cosθ = −p⃗ · E⃗
Work done in rotating from θ1 to θ2: W = pE(cosθ1 − cosθ2)

Potential Energy at Different Orientations

θ U State
U = −pE (minimum) Most stable
90° U = 0 Reference
180° U = +pE (maximum) Most unstable
Application: Microwave ovens — water molecules are permanent dipoles. Oscillating E-field makes them rotate, creating heat through molecular friction.
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Dipole in uniform E field at angle theta, forces F+ and F-, torque direction)_LINK_HERE

11. Continuous Charge Distribution

Types of Charge Density

Type Symbol Formula Unit
Linear λ λ = dq/dl C/m
Surface σ σ = dq/dS C/m2
Volume ρ ρ = dq/dV C/m3

Total Charge

  • q = ∫ λ dl (line)
  • q = ∫ σ dS (surface)
  • q = ∫ ρ dV (volume)
Example: 2m wire with total charge 4 μC uniformly distributed.
λ = q/L = 4μC/2m = 2 μC/m

12. Gauss’s Theorem & Applications MOST IMP

Electric Flux

ΦE = E⃗ · S⃗ = ES cosθ
S⃗ = area vector (normal to surface)
θ = angle between E⃗ and S⃗
SI Unit: N·m2/C or V·m
  • Flux through closed surface: ΦE = ∮ E⃗ · dS⃗
  • Positive flux = field lines leaving surface
  • Negative flux = field lines entering surface

Gauss’s Theorem

Statement: Total electric flux through any closed surface = (1/ε0) × total charge enclosed by that surface.
∮ E⃗ · dS⃗ = qenclosed / ε0
Closed surface = Gaussian surface
Key Point: Only enclosed charge matters. External charges contribute zero net flux (field lines enter & exit, canceling out).

Application 1: Infinite Line Charge

E = λ / (2πε0r)
Direction: Radially outward (for +λ)
E ∝ 1/r (not 1/r2)

Application 2: Infinite Plane Sheet

E = σ / (2ε0)
Direction: Perpendicular to sheet
Independent of distance! (E = constant everywhere)

Application 3: Charged Spherical Shell

Region Electric Field Key Result
Outside (r > R) E = (1/4πε0) · Q/r2 Behaves like point charge at center
Inside (r < R) E = 0 Zero field everywhere inside

Application 4: Uniformly Charged Solid Sphere

Region Electric Field Key Result
Outside (r > R) E = (1/4πε0) · Q/r2 Behaves like point charge at center
Inside (r < R) E = (1/4πε0) · Qr/R3 = ρr/(3ε0) E ∝ r (linear increase from center)
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: Gaussian surfaces – cylinder for line charge, pillbox for plane, sphere for shell/solid sphere)_LINK_HERE
ADD_YOUR_DIAGRAM(eg: E vs r graph for solid sphere – linear inside, 1/r2 outside, max at r=R)_LINK_HERE

13. Important Formulas — Quick Revision LAST MINUTE

Constants

  • k = 1/4πε0 = 9 × 109 N m2 C−2
  • ε0 = 8.854 × 10−12 C2 N−1 m−2
  • e = 1.6 × 10−19 C

All Formulas at a Glance

Concept Formula
Coulomb’s Force F = k|q1q2|/r2
Electric Field (point charge) E = k|q|/r2
Dipole Moment p = q × 2a
Axial Field (dipole) E = 2kp/r3 (r >> a)
Equatorial Field (dipole) E = kp/r3 (r >> a)
Torque on Dipole τ = pE sinθ
PE of Dipole U = −pE cosθ
Work Done W = pE(cosθ1 − cosθ2)
Electric Flux Φ = ES cosθ
Gauss’s Law ∮E⃗·dS⃗ = q/ε0
Infinite Line E = λ/(2πε0r)
Infinite Plane E = σ/(2ε0)
Shell (outside) E = kQ/r2
Shell (inside) E = 0
Solid Sphere (inside) E = kQr/R3
Field Dependence Summary:
Point charge → E ∝ 1/r2
Line charge → E ∝ 1/r
Plane sheet → E = constant
Dipole → E ∝ 1/r3
Shell inside → E = 0

14. NCERT Questions & Solutions EXAM PATTERN

Q1. What is the force between two small charged spheres having charges of 2 × 10−7 C and 3 × 10−7 C placed 30 cm apart in air?
Given: q1 = 2 × 10−7 C, q2 = 3 × 10−7 C, r = 30 cm = 0.30 m

Formula: F = k|q1q2|/r2

F = (9 × 109) × (2 × 10−7) × (3 × 10−7) / (0.30)2
F = (9 × 109) × (6 × 10−14) / 0.09
F = 54 × 10−5 / 0.09 = 6 × 10−3 N (Repulsive)
Tip: Convert cm to m. Mention attractive/repulsive for full marks.
Q2. The electrostatic force on a small sphere of charge 0.4 μC due to another small sphere of charge −0.8 μC in air is 0.2 N. (a) Find the distance. (b) What is the force on the second sphere due to the first?
(a) q1 = 0.4 μC, q2 = −0.8 μC, F = 0.2 N
r2 = k|q1q2|/F = (9×109)(0.4×10−6)(0.8×10−6)/0.2
r2 = 144 × 10−4 → r = 0.12 m = 12 cm

(b) By Newton’s Third Law: 0.2 N, attractive (equal & opposite)
Tip: Part (b) is conceptual. Don’t recalculate — use Newton’s Third Law.
Q3. Check that ke2/Gmemp is dimensionless and find its value. What does it signify?
Dimensions:
[k] = [ML3T−4A−2], [e2] = [A2T2]
[ke2] = [ML3T−2]
[G] = [M−1L3T−2], [memp] = [M2]
[Gmemp] = [ML3T−2]
Ratio = [M0L0T0] → Dimensionless

Value:2.27 × 1039

Significance: Electrostatic force between proton & electron is ~1039 times stronger than gravitational force. Gravity is negligible at atomic scale.
Tip: Always explain physical meaning of the result.
Q4. An electric dipole with dipole moment 4 × 10−9 C m is aligned at 30° with a uniform electric field of magnitude 5 × 104 N/C. Calculate the torque.
Given: p = 4 × 10−9 C m, E = 5 × 104 N/C, θ = 30°

Formula: τ = pE sinθ

τ = (4 × 10−9) × (5 × 104) × sin(30°)
τ = (4 × 10−9) × (5 × 104) × 0.5
τ = 1.0 × 10−4 N m
Tip: Use sinθ for torque, not cosθ.
Q5. A polythene piece rubbed with wool has a negative charge of 3 × 10−7 C. (a) Estimate number of electrons transferred. (b) Is there mass transfer?
(a) q = −3 × 10−7 C, e = −1.6 × 10−19 C
n = q/e = (−3×10−7)/(−1.6×10−19) = 1.88 × 1012 electrons

(b) Yes. Mass transferred = n × me
= (1.88 × 1012) × (9.1 × 10−31)
= 1.71 × 10−18 kg
Electrons transferred from wool to polythene. Polythene gains mass; wool loses mass.
Tip: Don’t say “no mass transfer” just because amount is tiny. Electrons have mass.
Q6. State Gauss’s theorem and use it to find E due to an infinitely long straight uniformly charged wire.
Statement: Total electric flux through any closed surface = (1/ε0) × net charge enclosed.
∮ E⃗ · dS⃗ = qenclosed0

Derivation for Infinite Line Charge:
• Symmetry: E is radial, same magnitude at distance r
• Gaussian Surface: Coaxial cylinder of radius r, length L
• Flux through curved surface: E × (2πrL)
• Flux through top & bottom: 0 (E parallel to surface)
• Total flux = E(2πrL)
• Enclosed charge: q = λL

By Gauss’s theorem: E(2πrL) = λL/ε0

E = λ/(2πε0r)
Direction: Radially outward for +λ
Tip: Mention symmetry, draw Gaussian surface, explain why flux through caps = 0. Structured derivations get full marks.
Q7. A hollow charged conductor has a tiny hole cut into its surface. Show that E in the hole is (σ/2ε0) n̂.
• Just outside conductor: E = σ/ε0 (standard result)
• This E is sum of: Epatch + Erest
• Small patch behaves like infinite plane: Epatch = σ/(2ε0) on both sides
• Outside: Epatch + Erest = σ/ε0
→ Erest = σ/ε0 − σ/(2ε0) = σ/(2ε0)
• Inside conductor: Erest − Epatch = 0 ✓
• In the hole (patch removed): Ehole = Erest = σ/(2ε0) n̂
Tip: This is a conceptual superposition problem. Break the field into contributions from the patch and the rest.

🎯 Exam Writing Tips

  • ✅ Draw diagram for every problem — carries marks
  • ✅ Write formula first, then substitute values
  • ✅ Always mention direction of force / field
  • ✅ Use vector notation where required
  • ✅ Check dimensional consistency
  • ✅ For Gauss’s law: state symmetry + Gaussian surface explicitly
  • ✅ Remember: Point → 1/r2 | Line → 1/r | Plane → constant | Dipole → 1/r3

All the best for your exams! 🌟

Scroll to Top