« Back to AP Physics Guide / Unit 10 Part 1: Charge & Force
While Part 1 focused on Force (a vector), Part 2 focuses on Energy (a scalar). Understanding Electric Potential is key to mastering how charges move through circuits and store energy in electronic components like capacitors.
1. Electric Potential Energy vs. Potential
In AP Physics 2, we distinguish between the energy of a specific charge (
) and the “potential” of a location in space (
).
- Electric Potential Energy (
): The energy a charge possesses due to its position in an electric field. - Electric Potential (
): Often called Voltage, this is the potential energy per unit charge (
).
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2. Capacitors
A capacitor is a device used to store electric charge and energy. The most common type on the exam is the Parallel Plate Capacitor.
Storing Charge: Capacitance (
) depends only on the geometry of the plates—their area (
) and separation distance (
).
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3. Conservation of Electric Energy
Just like a falling ball converts gravitational potential energy into kinetic energy, a charge moving through a potential difference converts electric potential energy into kinetic energy.
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4. Quick AP Practice
📚 Unit 10 Mastery Challenge
1. If you double the area of the plates in a parallel plate capacitor, what happens to its capacitance?
Check Answer
Since2. An electron is accelerated from rest through a potential difference of
. Does it gain or lose potential energy?
Check Answer
A negative charge (electron) moving toward a higher potential loses potential energy (it converts it to kinetic energy).3. A capacitor stores
of charge at
. How much energy is stored?
