Earth (electricity) in the context of "Electric potential"

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⭐ Core Definition: Earth (electricity)

In electrical engineering, ground or earth may refer to reference ground – a reference point in an electrical circuit from which voltages are measured, earth ground – a direct connection to the physical ground, or common ground – a common return path for electric current. Common ground is almost identical to neutral – a return path for electric current, with an added requirement that common ground has to be a "common" return path. To ground or to earth an object is to electrically connect the object to earth ground or common ground.

Earth wire, or ground wire, is a wire that connects an electrical equipment from its conductive but normally-unenergized parts to earth ground or common ground.

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👉 Earth (electricity) in the context of Electric potential

Electric potential (also called the electric field potential, potential drop, the electrostatic potential) is the difference in electric potential energy per unit of electric charge between two points in a static electric field. More precisely, electric potential is the amount of work needed to move a test charge from a reference point to a specific point in a static electric field, normalized to a unit of charge. The test charge used is small enough that disturbance to the field-producing charges is unnoticeable, and its motion across the field is supposed to proceed with negligible acceleration, so as to avoid the test charge acquiring kinetic energy or producing radiation. By definition, the electric potential at the reference point is zero units. Typically, the reference point is earth or a point at infinity, although any point can be used.

In classical electrostatics, the electrostatic field is a vector quantity expressed as the gradient of the electrostatic potential, which is a scalar quantity denoted by V or occasionally φ, equal to the electric potential energy of any charged particle at any location (measured in joules) divided by the charge of that particle (measured in coulombs). By dividing out the charge on the particle a quotient is obtained that is a property of the electric field itself. In short, an electric potential is the electric potential energy per unit charge.

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