Derivation: Electrostatic Potential Due to a Point Charge
Step 1: Physical situation
Consider a point charge placed at the origin O.
We want to find the electrostatic potential at a point P, which is at a distance from the charge.
By definition, electrostatic potential at a point is the work done per unit positive test charge in bringing it from infinity to that point, without acceleration.
Electric force on a unit test charge
For a point charge , electric field at distance is
Since the test charge is unit positive charge, the force is
Step 2: Small work done (why the minus sign appears)
Work done by external force for a small displacement :
The electric force pushes the charge away from Q, but we move it towards Q, so
This minus sign is very important conceptually.
Step 3: Setting up the definite integral
We bring the charge:
-
from infinity → where potential is zero
-
to distance
So,
Step 4: Actual integration (expanded)
Recall basic calculus:
So,
Minus × minus becomes plus:
Since ,
This is the total work done in bringing one unit charge from infinity to distance
2. Connecting Work Done and Potential (Key Concept)
Definition of Potential
Here:
-
= work done
-
= test charge
Since we used a unit charge (),
So,
👉 Same mathematical expression, but different physical meaning.
3. Why Work and Potential Have Different Units
This is where students usually mix things up.
(a) Unit of Work Done
(b) Unit of Potential
From definition,
