Electrostatics is the study of electric charges at rest and the forces, fields, and potentials they produce. At the AP Physics C level, this subject demands calculus-based reasoning: deriving electric fields via integration of continuous charge distributions, applying Gauss's law in integral form to exploit symmetry, and computing electric potential through line integrals of the electric field. The foundational law is Coulomb's law, which quantifies the force between two point charges. From this, the electric field concept emerges, and Gauss's law provides a powerful shortcut for calculating fields of symmetric charge distributions such as infinite planes, long cylinders, and spheres.
Electric potential connects the field to energy considerations: the work done by the electric force on a charge equals the negative change in potential energy. Equipotential surfaces are always perpendicular to field lines, and the electric field points in the direction of steepest decrease of potential. The interplay between field and potential, superposition of both vector and scalar quantities, and the use of calculus to handle non-uniform charge distributions form the intellectual core of AP Physics C electrostatics.
Beyond computation, electrostatics underpins technologies from photocopiers and electrostatic precipitators to the design of capacitors and the physics of lightning.