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The electric displacement field $\vec D$ satisfies two equations, $$\vec\nabla \cdot \vec D=\rho_f,$$ and $$\vec\nabla \times \vec D=\vec\nabla \times \vec p,$$ where $\rho_f$ and $\vec p$ are the free charge density and the polarization respectively.

My question is quite simple. Suppose there is no free charge so $\rho_f=0$ and the polarization has no curl, so $\vec\nabla \times \vec p=0$. Still, the electric displacement field does not need to vanish, it could be constant. Actually, we have $\vec D=\vec p+\vec\nabla f$ for any harmonic function, $\nabla^2 f=0$.

The reason this is bugging me is because in Problem 4.15 of the book by Griffiths, he asks the following question: in a system without free charges but with a given irrotational polarization $\vec p$, find $\vec D$. In the solution manual, he states that in the absence of free charges (and $\vec\nabla \times \vec p=0$) it follows that $\vec D=0$ (see figure). This seems incorrect to me. enter image description here

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  • $\begingroup$ You likely have boundary confitions, either ar the border of the domain where these conditions are verified, or at infinity, don't you ? $\endgroup$
    – Jhor
    Commented Aug 20, 2021 at 14:57
  • $\begingroup$ That is what I thought. I just want to make sure that there is no argument other than boundary conditions to specify this constant. $\endgroup$
    – Marcel
    Commented Aug 20, 2021 at 15:00
  • $\begingroup$ I suspect it's a semantics problem. Your reasoning is about a region of space. The claim in Griffiths is about a system. It may be implied that he means a system away from the influence of any external charge. $\endgroup$
    – The Photon
    Commented Aug 20, 2021 at 20:22
  • $\begingroup$ @ThePhoton could you turn your comment into an answer? I am not sure what you mean. $\endgroup$
    – Marcel
    Commented Aug 20, 2021 at 20:25

1 Answer 1

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If $\vec\nabla \times \vec D=0$ then $\vec D$ must be a gradient, $\vec D=\vec\nabla f$.

If $\vec\nabla \cdot\vec D=0$ then $f$ must be harmonic, $\nabla^2 f=0$.

A very common physical boundary condition is that the field should vanish at infinity, so as not to have infinite energy.

If $f$ is harmonic, all its partial derivatives are harmonic. For the gradient to vanish at infinity in all directions, all partial derivatives must vanish at infinity in all directions.

The only harmonic function that vanishes at infinity in all directions is the zero function. So all partial derivatives of $f$ are identically zero, so $\vec D=0$.

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