📢Poisson and Laplace Charge or Boundaries

The electrostatic scalar potential (VV) arises in a static situation because the electric field (E\vec{E}) is curl-free, allowing E\vec{E} to be expressed as the negative gradient of the potential (E=V\vec{E}=-\nabla V). When this relationship is incorporated into Gauss's law, it reveals that VV must satisfy Poisson's equation (2V=ρε0\nabla^2 V=-\frac{\rho}{\varepsilon_0}), where ρ\rho is the charge density. The governing equation fundamentally determines the potential's nature: when the field is sourced by internal charge density (ρ\rho), Poisson's equation applies, yielding a radial potential that decays outward from the source. If the region is charge-free (ρ=0\rho=0), 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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