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Coulomb's law for the static electric field of a point charge is given by

$$\overrightarrow{E}=\frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_0}\frac{q}{r^2}\hat{r}$$

Now if we take the divergence of both sides of the above equation we will get

$$\overrightarrow{\nabla}\cdot \overrightarrow{E}=\frac{q}{4\pi\epsilon_0}\left\{\frac{1}{r^2}\frac{\partial}{\partial r}\left(r^2\frac{1}{r^2}\right)\right\}$$ $$\Rightarrow \overrightarrow{\nabla}\cdot \overrightarrow{E}=0$$

But according to the differential form of Gauss's law $\overrightarrow{\nabla}\cdot \overrightarrow{E}$ should be equals to $\frac{\rho}{\epsilon_0}$; where $\rho$ is volume charge density.

In this condition I can not understand where I have made mistakes or where I am logically wrong. So can any one please help me to get rid from this conceptual dilemma?

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What you did is correct everywhere except at $r=0$. The charge density is zero everywhere except there (where it is infinite). The expression $r^2/r^2$ is indeterminate at $r=0$, so you can’t use that method of calculating the divergence there.

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