Coulomb's law

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Coulomb's law. Electric field E at point P due to charge q.

Coulomb's law gives the electric field at the point P due to an electrostatic point charge q at position . The strength of the electric field depends on the inverse-squared distance of P to q and is directed from q to P where the field is measured, that is,

Note that although this may look like an inverse-cubed dependence, we must not forget that the denominator has dimension length. Indeed, defining a (dimensionless) unit vector by

we see more clearly the inverse-squared dependence on distance:

The quantities ε0 and ε0 are the vacuum permittivity and the relative static permittivity (also known as relative dielectric constant), respectively. This formulation of Coulomb's law is in the rationalized SI system of units.

Alternative formulation

We introduced the law as defining an electric field. However, an alternative formulation is by defining the interaction energy of two electric point charges. This is the formulation first given by Charles-Augustin de Coulomb.

(To be continued)