The integral form of Gauss's Law relates the integral of the electric field over some surface to the charge enclosed by that surface.
where is the charge density and the volume integral extends over the volume enclosed by the surface in the first integral. Gauss's Law can also be written in its differential form:
The electric potential is related to the electric field:
We can then substitute Eqn. 3 into Eqn. 2
Equation 5 is known as Poisson's Equation. If there is no free charge, then and Eqn. 5 reduces to Laplace's Eqn.:
In Cartesian coordinates, Laplace's Eqn. reads: