📢Poisson and Laplace Charge or Boundaries
The electrostatic scalar potential () arises in a static situation because the electric field () is curl-free, allowing to be expressed as the negative gradient of the potential (). When this relationship is incorporated into Gauss's law, it reveals that must satisfy Poisson's equation (), where is the charge density. The governing equation fundamentally determines the potential's nature: when the field is sourced by internal charge density (), Poisson's equation applies, yielding a radial potential that decays outward from the source. If the region is charge-free (), the potential is governed by Laplace's equation, forcing the solution to be entirely constrained by external boundary conditions, acting as a smooth, time-independent interpolation that averages the fixed potential values on the edges.
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