Electrostatic potential of unit charge in vacuum

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around understanding the electrostatic potential of a unit charge in a vacuum, specifically the equation relating potential to distance. The user is confused about the relationship between the distance expressions and seeks clarification on deriving the formula involving the cosine of the angle in a triangle. Participants explain that the relationship can be derived using standard trigonometric identities and vector subtraction. The user realizes that the problem can be simplified by recognizing the geometric properties of triangles and the unit vector involved. The conversation concludes with the user gaining clarity on the mathematical relationships involved.
dingo_d
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Homework Statement


I'm having hard time seeing that from this picture:
wiugio.jpg

Follows that:
\phi(\vect{r})=\frac{q}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\cdot\frac{1}{|\vec{x}|}
The thing that puzzles me isn't the equation but this:
\frac{1}{|\vec{x}|}=\frac{1}{|\vec{r}-\vec{k}|}=\frac{1}{\sqrt{1+r^2-2r\cos\theta}}

Homework Equations



The length of vector (norm):
||\vec{a}||=\sqrt{a_1^2+a_2^2+a_3^2}

The Attempt at a Solution



Now I know why is |\vec{x}|=|\vec{r}-\vec{k}|

That follows from simple subtraction of two vectors. And from triangle I see that \cos\theta=\frac{|\vec{k}|}{|\vec{r}|}, so I can get \vec{k} from that, but how do I get that thing under the square? I read a bit in Jacson, that I would need to transform that into polar coordinate system, but how?

Can someone give me detailed expansion of that?
 
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dingo_d said:
… how do I get that thing under the square? …

Hi dingo_d! :smile:

Either …

i] it's a standard trig formula for any triangle … a2 = b2 + c2 - 2bccosA

ii] just expand (r - k).(r - k) = r2 + … ? :smile:
 
Wow, really it's trig formula for triangle! the k is unit vector so k^2=1! I see it now :D Thanks!
 
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