PlanetPhysics/Derivation of Coulomb's Law From Gauss Law

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As an example of the statement that [[../MaxwellsEquations/|Maxwell's equations]] completely define electromagnetic phenomena, it will be shown that [[../CoulombsLaw/|Coulomb's law]] may be derived from [[../GausssLaw/|Gauss' Law]] for electrostatics. Consider a point [[../Charge/|charge]] of charge q; we can obtain an expression for the [[../ElectricField/|Electric Field]] at a point in space due to this charge by surrounding it with a "virtual" sphere of radius R, and then using the Gauss' law in integral form:

S๐„d๐€=qϵ0 .

The surface integral on the the right-hand-size of the equation can be written in spherical polar coordinates over the "virtual" sphere, considering the point charge at its centre. Under the assumption that the electric field is spherically symmetric, its value over the sphere surface is constant. Then, we can write

S๐„d๐€=02π0πR2Esinθdθdϕ;

hence,

4πR2E=qϵ0,

or

E=q4πϵ0R2.

The usual form can then be recovered from the [[../LorentzForceLaw/|Lorentz force law]] ๐…=๐„q+๐ฏ×๐, noting the absence of [[../NeutrinoRestMass/|magnetic field]].

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