My teacher explained about the earthing of a conductor. She said that when we connect a conductor with the Earth, its potential goes to zero because the Earth always has zero potential; however, she never explained why this happens, so I have tried to understand this by reasoning with electric fields.
Suppose I have a conductor with $+Q$ charge on its surface. When I connect the conductor with Earth, the conductor's potential ($V$) becomes zero.
Now, the positive charge will create an electric field that will attract the electrons from Earth, which move to the conductor. As the conductor gains the electrons, the positive charge will keep decreasing. At the same time, Earth will have a positive charge (as it is losing its electrons). However, the electric field due to Earth is almost zero since its radius is much larger. Usually, the electron should keep moving until the net electric field becomes zero between the conductor and Earth; here, the Earth has zero electric field, so electrons will keep moving to the conductor until the net charge becomes zero.
Is my intuition correct here? Is it valid for every conductor of any shape and size?