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Potential

In physics, potential is a scalar field used to describe a conservative (curl-free) vector field, such that the vector field is the gradient of the potential.

Examples include gravity potential, electrostatic potential.

Or, a vector field describing a divergence free vector field (field with only closed field lines) that is its curl: magnetic potential.

Because the physically observable field is a spatial derivative of its potential, adding an arbitrary constant field to it -- a gauge transformation -- will not change anything in the physics of a system. This is called gauge invariance.

In quantum theory, we can identify the potential of a field with the wave function of the intermediary particle associated with that field, like the photon for the electromagnetic field, etc.

In classical mechanics, the forces is -1 times the gradient of the potential energy (so that the system is pushed towards a lower-energy configuration).