Answer:
Electric field lines point away from positive charges and toward negative charges. <u>True</u>
Electric field lines are continuous; they do not have a beginning or an ending.<u> False</u>
Electric field lines can never intersect. <u>True</u>
Electric field lines are close together in regions of space where the magnitude the electric field is weak and are father apart where it is strong. <u>False</u>
At every point in space, the electric field vector at that point is tangent to the electric field line through that point.<u> True</u>
Explanation:
Electric field lines point away from positive charges and toward negative charges. Always the field lines go to negative charges and leave from positive charges.
Electric field lines are continuous; they do not have a beginning or an ending.<u> False </u>
Because the field lines starts at positive charges and ends in negative charges.
Electric field lines can never intersect. <u>True</u>
It can not intercept the field lines because in that point the the field would have two directions. Besides, in that point the real value of the field should be found adding both field lines.
Electric field lines are close together in regions of space where the magnitude the electric field is weak and are father apart where it is strong. <u>False</u>
This fact is opposite to that so the regions of space where the magnitude the electric field is weak the lines are father apart and where the field is strong the lines are close together.
At every point in space, the electric field vector at that point is tangent to the electric field line through that point.<u> True</u>
This statement correspond to the definition of the field line.