We know that the electric field is the negative gradient of the potential: \[ \vec{E} = -\nabla V \] The given electric field is: \[ \vec{E} = \alpha \frac{\hat{r}}{r^3} \] Since the electric field is radial and only depends on \( r \), we consider the radial component of the electric field: \[ E_r = \alpha \frac{1}{r^3} \] The relationship between the electric field and the potential in one dimension is: \[ E_r = -\frac{dV}{dr} \] Substituting the given electric field: \[ \alpha \frac{1}{r^3} = -\frac{dV}{dr} \] Now, we integrate both sides with respect to \( r \): \[ dV = -\alpha \frac{dr}{r^3} \] Integrating both sides: \[ V(r) = \int \alpha \frac{dr}{r^3} = \frac{\alpha}{2r^2} + C \] Where \( C \) is the constant of integration. In the context of electrostatics, we usually set the potential to zero at infinity, implying \( C = 0 \). Therefore: \[ V(r) = \frac{\alpha}{r} \] Thus, the magnitude of the potential is \( \frac{\alpha}{r} \), which is option (A).
Use the given information to select the amino acid attached to the 3′ end of tRNA during the process of translation, if the coding strand of the structural gene being transcribed has the nucleotide sequence TAC.