Symmetric source positions
The shared separation control places the two source charges equally far from the origin on the horizontal axis.
Concept module
Map how source-charge sign and distance shape electric potential, compare potential differences across one honest scan line, and connect the downhill slope of V to the electric field.
The simulation shows two source charges on a horizontal axis, a movable probe charge inside a bounded potential region, and optional overlays for a signed potential map, equipotential contours, a field arrow at the probe, and the horizontal scan line used by the graphs. Dragging the probe changes the sampled location directly on the stage, while dragging either source marker changes the shared source separation symmetrically. Sliders provide the same controls for source-charge sign and size, separation, probe position, and test-charge sign. Color saturation in the potential map is clipped for readability near a source, but the numeric readout and graphs still preserve the correct trend that potential magnitude grows rapidly as the probe approaches a charge. At the probe (-0.8 m, 0.8 m), charges 2 q and -2 q separated by 2.4 m give V_A = 2.24 and V_B = -0.93, so the net potential is 1.31. The probe sits in a positive-potential region. The local field magnitude is 2.57 and The field points up-right, which is the downhill direction on the potential map. For q_test = 1 q, the potential energy is 1.31. The test charge has positive potential energy here.
Interactive lab
Keep the stage, graph, and immediate control feedback in one working view.
Electric Potential
Drag the probe anywhere in the stage or drag either source marker to change the shared separation. Warm regions are positive potential, cool regions are negative, and the field arrow shows the downhill direction on that same map.
Graphs
Switch graph views without breaking the live stage and time link.
Potential along scan line
Source A, Source B, and the net potential are sampled along the same horizontal scan line. Vertical separation between two x-positions is a potential difference.
Controls
Adjust the physical parameters and watch the motion respond.
Positive values raise nearby potential and negative values lower it.
Changing Source B lets the second potential contribution reinforce, weaken, or reverse the net value.
Moves both sources symmetrically without breaking the bounded layout.
Moves the probe left or right across the stage and linked scan graphs.
More tools
Secondary controls, alternate presets, and less-used toggles stay nearby without crowding the main bench.
Moves the probe to a different horizontal scan line.
Changes only the potential energy U = qV, not the potential itself.
More presets
Presets
Predict -> manipulate -> observe
Keep the active prompt next to the controls so each change has an immediate visible consequence.
Try this
Equation map
Select a symbol to highlight the matching control and the graph or overlay it most directly changes.
Changes the sign and size of Source A, which raises or lowers the nearby potential map and reshapes the scan curves.
Equations in play
Choose an equation to sync the active symbol, control highlight, and related graph mapping.
More tools
Detailed noticing prompts, guided overlays, and challenge tasks stay available without taking over the main bench.
What to notice
Use the current prompt as a compact investigation cue. Each one points at a pattern the stage and graphs already show in the live state.
Try this
Why it matters
Guided overlays
Focus one overlay at a time to see what it represents and what to notice in the live motion.
Overlay focus
Shows signed potential across the stage with warm colors for positive V and cool colors for negative V.
What to notice
Why it matters
Potential difference becomes visible as a height change on one shared landscape rather than a detached number.
Challenge mode
Use the shared two-charge map for compact voltage targets. The checklist reads the live potential and field link, not a separate answer sheet.
3 of 10 checks
Suggested start
The checklist updates from the live simulation state, active graph, overlays, inspect time, and compare setup.
Symmetric source positions
The shared separation control places the two source charges equally far from the origin on the horizontal axis.
Potential from one source
A positive source contributes positive potential, a negative source contributes negative potential, and the magnitude falls with distance.
Scalar superposition
Net potential is the signed sum of the source contributions at one point.
Field from potential
The electric field points in the direction of the steepest drop in potential.
Horizontal scan-line link
Along the current horizontal slice, the x-component of the field is the negative slope of the potential graph.
Potential energy
Changing the sign of the test charge changes the sign of U without changing the potential set by the sources.
Progress
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Try this setup
Copy the live bench state and reopen this concept with the same controls, graph, overlays, and compare context.
Stable links
Previous step: Electric Fields.
Short explanation
Electric potential describes the electric potential energy per unit positive test charge at a location. Positive source charges raise the potential, negative source charges lower it, and distance controls how strongly each source contributes.
This module keeps the same bounded two-charge geometry as Electric Fields so the map, equipotential cues, probe readout, worked examples, prediction prompts, and quick test all refer to one honest model. Along the current scan line, the electric field is the downhill slope of the potential graph rather than a separate disconnected rule.
Key ideas
Live potential checks
2 q
-2 q
2.4 m
-0.8 m
0.8 m
1. Place the two sources on the shared axis
2. Measure the probe distances
3. Evaluate the signed source contributions
4. Add the scalar contributions
Net potential
Potential-difference checkpoint
Prediction prompt
Check your reasoning
Common misconception
If the electric field is zero at one point, the electric potential there must also be zero.
Field and potential are related, but they are not the same quantity. A zero field means the local slope of potential is zero, not that the potential itself vanishes.
At the midpoint between two equal positive charges, the field cancels because the pushes are equal and opposite, but the potential stays positive because both scalar contributions are positive.
Quick test
Variable effect
Question 1 of 5
Choose one answer to reveal feedback, then test the idea in the live system if a guided example is available.
Accessible description
The simulation shows two source charges on a horizontal axis, a movable probe charge inside a bounded potential region, and optional overlays for a signed potential map, equipotential contours, a field arrow at the probe, and the horizontal scan line used by the graphs.
Dragging the probe changes the sampled location directly on the stage, while dragging either source marker changes the shared source separation symmetrically. Sliders provide the same controls for source-charge sign and size, separation, probe position, and test-charge sign.
Color saturation in the potential map is clipped for readability near a source, but the numeric readout and graphs still preserve the correct trend that potential magnitude grows rapidly as the probe approaches a charge.
Graph summary
The potential-scan graph plots Source A's contribution, Source B's contribution, and the net potential along the current horizontal scan line. Hovering the graph previews the same x-location on the stage.
The slope-to-field graph plots the net horizontal field and the matching negative slope of the potential graph along that same scan line. The test-charge sign changes the potential-energy readout, but the graphs remain source-only views of V and E.
Connect this voltage view
These suggestions come from the concept registry, so the reason label reflects either curated guidance or the fallback progression logic.
Keep one battery and two resistors in view while current, voltage, resistance, Ohm's law, and the contrast between series and parallel all stay tied to one honest circuit.
Keep one source and one resistive load in view while current, power, and accumulated energy over time stay tied to the same honest circuit.
Switch the same two loads between one loop and two branches, then track how current, voltage, brightness, and charge flow reorganize without changing the battery.