potentíálech
Potentíálech is the plural form of the Spanish word “potencial,” which translates into English as “potentials.” In physics, a potential is a scalar or vector quantity that encodes information about the force field acting on a system. Potentials are central to the description of conservative forces, where the work done along a path depends only on the endpoints. The most common potentials include the electric and magnetic scalar potential \(V\), the magnetic vector potential \(\mathbf{A}\), and the gravitational potential \(\Phi\). By taking the negative gradient of a scalar potential, one obtains the corresponding force field: \(\mathbf{F} = -\nabla V\). In electromagnetism, Maxwell’s equations can be expressed in terms of the scalar and vector potentials, which simplifies the calculation of electromagnetic fields and highlights gauge freedom: different choices of \((V,\mathbf{A})\) can describe the same physical fields.
Potentíálech also appear in quantum mechanics, where the potential energy term \(V(\mathbf{r})\) in the Schrödinger equation