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Differential operator

In mathematics, a differential operator is an operator defined as a function of the differentiation operator. It is helpful, as a matter of notation first, to consider differentiation as an abstract operation that accepts a function and returns another function (in the style of a higher-order function in computer science).

A harmonic function defined on an annulus. Harmonic functions are exactly those functions which lie in the kernel of the Laplace operator, an important differential operator.

This article considers mainly linear differential operators, which are the most common type. However, non-linear differential operators also exist, such as the Schwarzian derivative.

Definition Edit

Given a nonnegative integer m, an order-  linear differential operator is a map   from a function space   to another function space   that can be written as:

 
where   is a multi-index of non-negative integers,  , and for each  ,   is a function on some open domain in n-dimensional space. The operator   is interpreted as
 

Thus for a function  :

 

The notation   is justified (i.e., independent of order of differentiation) because of the symmetry of second derivatives.

The polynomial p obtained by replacing D by variables   in P is called the total symbol of P; i.e., the total symbol of P above is:

 
where   The highest homogeneous component of the symbol, namely,
 

is called the principal symbol of P. While the total symbol is not intrinsically defined, the principal symbol is intrinsically defined (i.e., it is a function on the cotangent bundle).[1]

More generally, let E and F be vector bundles over a manifold X. Then the linear operator

 

is a differential operator of order   if, in local coordinates on X, we have

 

where, for each multi-index α,   is a bundle map, symmetric on the indices α.

The kth order coefficients of P transform as a symmetric tensor

 

whose domain is the tensor product of the kth symmetric power of the cotangent bundle of X with E, and whose codomain is F. This symmetric tensor is known as the principal symbol (or just the symbol) of P.

The coordinate system xi permits a local trivialization of the cotangent bundle by the coordinate differentials dxi, which determine fiber coordinates ξi. In terms of a basis of frames eμ, fν of E and F, respectively, the differential operator P decomposes into components

 

on each section u of E. Here Pνμ is the scalar differential operator defined by

 

With this trivialization, the principal symbol can now be written

 

In the cotangent space over a fixed point x of X, the symbol   defines a homogeneous polynomial of degree k in   with values in  .

Fourier interpretation Edit

A differential operator P and its symbol appear naturally in connection with the Fourier transform as follows. Let ƒ be a Schwartz function. Then by the inverse Fourier transform,

 

This exhibits P as a Fourier multiplier. A more general class of functions p(x,ξ) which satisfy at most polynomial growth conditions in ξ under which this integral is well-behaved comprises the pseudo-differential operators.

Examples Edit

 
Del defines the gradient, and is used to calculate the curl, divergence, and Laplacian of various objects.

History Edit

The conceptual step of writing a differential operator as something free-standing is attributed to Louis François Antoine Arbogast in 1800.[2]

Notations Edit

The most common differential operator is the action of taking the derivative. Common notations for taking the first derivative with respect to a variable x include:

 ,  ,   and  .

When taking higher, nth order derivatives, the operator may be written:

 ,  ,  , or  .

The derivative of a function f of an argument x is sometimes given as either of the following:

 
 

The D notation's use and creation is credited to Oliver Heaviside, who considered differential operators of the form

 

in his study of differential equations.

One of the most frequently seen differential operators is the Laplacian operator, defined by

 

Another differential operator is the Θ operator, or theta operator, defined by[3]

 

This is sometimes also called the homogeneity operator, because its eigenfunctions are the monomials in z:

 

In n variables the homogeneity operator is given by

 

As in one variable, the eigenspaces of Θ are the spaces of homogeneous functions. (Euler's homogeneous function theorem)

In writing, following common mathematical convention, the argument of a differential operator is usually placed on the right side of the operator itself. Sometimes an alternative notation is used: The result of applying the operator to the function on the left side of the operator and on the right side of the operator, and the difference obtained when applying the differential operator to the functions on both sides, are denoted by arrows as follows:

 
 
 

Such a bidirectional-arrow notation is frequently used for describing the probability current of quantum mechanics.

Adjoint of an operator Edit

Given a linear differential operator  

 
the adjoint of this operator is defined as the operator   such that
 
where the notation   is used for the scalar product or inner product. This definition therefore depends on the definition of the scalar product (or inner product).

Formal adjoint in one variable Edit

In the functional space of square-integrable functions on a real interval (a, b), the scalar product is defined by

 

where the line over f(x) denotes the complex conjugate of f(x). If one moreover adds the condition that f or g vanishes as   and  , one can also define the adjoint of T by

 

This formula does not explicitly depend on the definition of the scalar product. It is therefore sometimes chosen as a definition of the adjoint operator. When   is defined according to this formula, it is called the formal adjoint of T.

A (formally) self-adjoint operator is an operator equal to its own (formal) adjoint.

Several variables Edit

If Ω is a domain in Rn, and P a differential operator on Ω, then the adjoint of P is defined in L2(Ω) by duality in the analogous manner:

 

for all smooth L2 functions f, g. Since smooth functions are dense in L2, this defines the adjoint on a dense subset of L2: P* is a densely defined operator.

Example Edit

The Sturm–Liouville operator is a well-known example of a formal self-adjoint operator. This second-order linear differential operator L can be written in the form

 

This property can be proven using the formal adjoint definition above.[4]

This operator is central to Sturm–Liouville theory where the eigenfunctions (analogues to eigenvectors) of this operator are considered.

Properties of differential operators Edit

Differentiation is linear, i.e.

 
 

where f and g are functions, and a is a constant.

Any polynomial in D with function coefficients is also a differential operator. We may also compose differential operators by the rule

 

Some care is then required: firstly any function coefficients in the operator D2 must be differentiable as many times as the application of D1 requires. To get a ring of such operators we must assume derivatives of all orders of the coefficients used. Secondly, this ring will not be commutative: an operator gD isn't the same in general as Dg. For example we have the relation basic in quantum mechanics:

 

The subring of operators that are polynomials in D with constant coefficients is, by contrast, commutative. It can be characterised another way: it consists of the translation-invariant operators.

The differential operators also obey the shift theorem.

Ring of polynomial differential operators Edit

Ring of univariate polynomial differential operators Edit

If R is a ring, let   be the non-commutative polynomial ring over R in the variables D and X, and I the two-sided ideal generated by DXXD − 1. Then the ring of univariate polynomial differential operators over R is the quotient ring  . This is a non-commutative simple ring. Every element can be written in a unique way as a R-linear combination of monomials of the form  . It supports an analogue of Euclidean division of polynomials.

Differential modules[clarification needed] over   (for the standard derivation) can be identified with modules over  .

Ring of multivariate polynomial differential operators Edit

If R is a ring, let   be the non-commutative polynomial ring over R in the variables  , and I the two-sided ideal generated by the elements

 

for all   where   is Kronecker delta. Then the ring of multivariate polynomial differential operators over R is the quotient ring  .

This is a non-commutative simple ring. Every element can be written in a unique way as a R-linear combination of monomials of the form  .

Coordinate-independent description Edit

In differential geometry and algebraic geometry it is often convenient to have a coordinate-independent description of differential operators between two vector bundles. Let E and F be two vector bundles over a differentiable manifold M. An R-linear mapping of sections P : Γ(E) → Γ(F) is said to be a kth-order linear differential operator if it factors through the jet bundle Jk(E). In other words, there exists a linear mapping of vector bundles

 

such that

 

where jk: Γ(E) → Γ(Jk(E)) is the prolongation that associates to any section of E its k-jet.

This just means that for a given section s of E, the value of P(s) at a point x ∈ M is fully determined by the kth-order infinitesimal behavior of s in x. In particular this implies that P(s)(x) is determined by the germ of s in x, which is expressed by saying that differential operators are local. A foundational result is the Peetre theorem showing that the converse is also true: any (linear) local operator is differential.

Relation to commutative algebra Edit

An equivalent, but purely algebraic description of linear differential operators is as follows: an R-linear map P is a kth-order linear differential operator, if for any k + 1 smooth functions   we have

 

Here the bracket   is defined as the commutator

 

This characterization of linear differential operators shows that they are particular mappings between modules over a commutative algebra, allowing the concept to be seen as a part of commutative algebra.

Variants Edit

A differential operator of infinite order Edit

A differential operator of infinite order is (roughly) a differential operator whose total symbol is a power series instead of a polynomial.

Bidifferential operator Edit

A differential operator acting on two functions   is called a bidifferential operator. The notion appears, for instance, in an associative algebra structure on a deformation quantization of a Poisson algebra.[5]

Microdifferential operator Edit

A microdifferential operator is a type of operator on an open subset of a cotangent bundle, as opposed to an open subset of a manifold. It is obtained by extending the notion of a differential operator to the cotangent bundle.[6]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Schapira 1985, 1.1.7
  2. ^ James Gasser (editor), A Boole Anthology: Recent and classical studies in the logic of George Boole (2000), p. 169; Google Books.
  3. ^ E. W. Weisstein. "Theta Operator". Retrieved 2009-06-12.
  4. ^
     
  5. ^ Omori, Hideki; Maeda, Y.; Yoshioka, A. (1992). "Deformation quantization of Poisson algebras". www.semanticscholar.org.
  6. ^ Schapira 1985, § 1.2. § 1.3.
  • Freed, Daniel S. (1987), Geometry of Dirac operators, p. 8, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.186.8445
  • Hörmander, L. (1983), The analysis of linear partial differential operators I, Grundl. Math. Wissenschaft., vol. 256, Springer, doi:10.1007/978-3-642-96750-4, ISBN 3-540-12104-8, MR 0717035.
  • Schapira, Pierre (1985). Microdifferential Systems in the Complex Domain. Springer.
  • Wells, R.O. (1973), Differential analysis on complex manifolds, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-387-90419-0.

Further reading Edit

  • Fedosov, Boris; Schulze, Bert-Wolfgang; Tarkhanov, Nikolai (2002). "Analytic index formulas for elliptic corner operators". Annales de l'Institut Fourier. 52 (3): 899–982. doi:10.5802/aif.1906. ISSN 1777-5310.

External links Edit

differential, operator, mathematics, differential, operator, operator, defined, function, differentiation, operator, helpful, matter, notation, first, consider, differentiation, abstract, operation, that, accepts, function, returns, another, function, style, h. In mathematics a differential operator is an operator defined as a function of the differentiation operator It is helpful as a matter of notation first to consider differentiation as an abstract operation that accepts a function and returns another function in the style of a higher order function in computer science A harmonic function defined on an annulus Harmonic functions are exactly those functions which lie in the kernel of the Laplace operator an important differential operator This article considers mainly linear differential operators which are the most common type However non linear differential operators also exist such as the Schwarzian derivative Contents 1 Definition 2 Fourier interpretation 3 Examples 4 History 5 Notations 6 Adjoint of an operator 6 1 Formal adjoint in one variable 6 2 Several variables 6 3 Example 7 Properties of differential operators 8 Ring of polynomial differential operators 8 1 Ring of univariate polynomial differential operators 8 2 Ring of multivariate polynomial differential operators 9 Coordinate independent description 9 1 Relation to commutative algebra 10 Variants 10 1 A differential operator of infinite order 10 2 Bidifferential operator 10 3 Microdifferential operator 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksDefinition EditGiven a nonnegative integer m an order m displaystyle m linear differential operator is a map P displaystyle P from a function space F 1 displaystyle mathcal F 1 to another function space F 2 displaystyle mathcal F 2 that can be written as P a m a a x D a displaystyle P sum alpha leq m a alpha x D alpha where a a 1 a 2 a n displaystyle alpha alpha 1 alpha 2 cdots alpha n is a multi index of non negative integers a a 1 a 2 a n displaystyle alpha alpha 1 alpha 2 cdots alpha n and for each a displaystyle alpha a a x displaystyle a alpha x is a function on some open domain in n dimensional space The operator D a displaystyle D alpha is interpreted as D a a x 1 a 1 x 2 a 2 x n a n displaystyle D alpha frac partial alpha partial x 1 alpha 1 partial x 2 alpha 2 cdots partial x n alpha n Thus for a function f F 1 displaystyle f in mathcal F 1 P f a m a a x a f x 1 a 1 x 2 a 2 x n a n displaystyle Pf sum alpha leq m a alpha x frac partial alpha f partial x 1 alpha 1 partial x 2 alpha 2 cdots partial x n alpha n The notation D a displaystyle D alpha is justified i e independent of order of differentiation because of the symmetry of second derivatives The polynomial p obtained by replacing D by variables 3 displaystyle xi in P is called the total symbol of P i e the total symbol of P above is p x 3 a m a a x 3 a displaystyle p x xi sum alpha leq m a alpha x xi alpha where 3 a 3 1 a 1 3 n a n displaystyle xi alpha xi 1 alpha 1 cdots xi n alpha n The highest homogeneous component of the symbol namely s x 3 a m a a x 3 a displaystyle sigma x xi sum alpha m a alpha x xi alpha is called the principal symbol of P While the total symbol is not intrinsically defined the principal symbol is intrinsically defined i e it is a function on the cotangent bundle 1 More generally let E and F be vector bundles over a manifold X Then the linear operator P C E C F displaystyle P C infty E to C infty F is a differential operator of order k displaystyle k if in local coordinates on X we have P u x a k P a x a u x a lower order terms displaystyle Pu x sum alpha k P alpha x frac partial alpha u partial x alpha text lower order terms where for each multi index a P a x E F displaystyle P alpha x E to F is a bundle map symmetric on the indices a The kth order coefficients of P transform as a symmetric tensor s P S k T X E F displaystyle sigma P S k T X otimes E to F whose domain is the tensor product of the kth symmetric power of the cotangent bundle of X with E and whose codomain is F This symmetric tensor is known as the principal symbol or just the symbol of P The coordinate system xi permits a local trivialization of the cotangent bundle by the coordinate differentials dxi which determine fiber coordinates 3i In terms of a basis of frames em fn of E and F respectively the differential operator P decomposes into components P u n m P n m u m displaystyle Pu nu sum mu P nu mu u mu on each section u of E Here Pnm is the scalar differential operator defined by P n m a P n m a x a displaystyle P nu mu sum alpha P nu mu alpha frac partial partial x alpha With this trivialization the principal symbol can now be written s P 3 u n a k m P n m a x 3 a u m displaystyle sigma P xi u nu sum alpha k sum mu P nu mu alpha x xi alpha u mu In the cotangent space over a fixed point x of X the symbol s P displaystyle sigma P defines a homogeneous polynomial of degree k in T x X displaystyle T x X with values in Hom E x F x displaystyle operatorname Hom E x F x Fourier interpretation EditA differential operator P and its symbol appear naturally in connection with the Fourier transform as follows Let ƒ be a Schwartz function Then by the inverse Fourier transform P f x 1 2 p d 2 R d e i x 3 p x i 3 f 3 d 3 displaystyle Pf x frac 1 2 pi frac d 2 int limits mathbf R d e ix cdot xi p x i xi hat f xi d xi This exhibits P as a Fourier multiplier A more general class of functions p x 3 which satisfy at most polynomial growth conditions in 3 under which this integral is well behaved comprises the pseudo differential operators Examples EditThe differential operator P displaystyle P is elliptic if its symbol is invertible that is for each nonzero 8 T X displaystyle theta in T X the bundle map s P 8 8 displaystyle sigma P theta dots theta is invertible On a compact manifold it follows from the elliptic theory that P is a Fredholm operator it has finite dimensional kernel and cokernel In the study of hyperbolic and parabolic partial differential equations zeros of the principal symbol correspond to the characteristics of the partial differential equation In applications to the physical sciences operators such as the Laplace operator play a major role in setting up and solving partial differential equations In differential topology the exterior derivative and Lie derivative operators have intrinsic meaning In abstract algebra the concept of a derivation allows for generalizations of differential operators which do not require the use of calculus Frequently such generalizations are employed in algebraic geometry and commutative algebra See also Jet mathematics In the development of holomorphic functions of a complex variable z x i y sometimes a complex function is considered to be a function of two real variables x and y Use is made of the Wirtinger derivatives which are partial differential operators z 1 2 x i y z 1 2 x i y displaystyle frac partial partial z frac 1 2 left frac partial partial x i frac partial partial y right quad frac partial partial bar z frac 1 2 left frac partial partial x i frac partial partial y right This approach is also used to study functions of several complex variables and functions of a motor variable The differential operator del also called nabla is an important vector differential operator It appears frequently in physics in places like the differential form of Maxwell s equations In three dimensional Cartesian coordinates del is defined as x x y y z z displaystyle nabla mathbf hat x partial over partial x mathbf hat y partial over partial y mathbf hat z partial over partial z Del defines the gradient and is used to calculate the curl divergence and Laplacian of various objects History EditThe conceptual step of writing a differential operator as something free standing is attributed to Louis Francois Antoine Arbogast in 1800 2 Notations EditThe most common differential operator is the action of taking the derivative Common notations for taking the first derivative with respect to a variable x include d d x displaystyle d over dx D displaystyle D D x displaystyle D x and x displaystyle partial x When taking higher nth order derivatives the operator may be written d n d x n displaystyle d n over dx n D n displaystyle D n D x n displaystyle D x n or x n displaystyle partial x n The derivative of a function f of an argument x is sometimes given as either of the following f x displaystyle f x f x displaystyle f x The D notation s use and creation is credited to Oliver Heaviside who considered differential operators of the form k 0 n c k D k displaystyle sum k 0 n c k D k in his study of differential equations One of the most frequently seen differential operators is the Laplacian operator defined by D 2 k 1 n 2 x k 2 displaystyle Delta nabla 2 sum k 1 n frac partial 2 partial x k 2 Another differential operator is the 8 operator or theta operator defined by 3 8 z d d z displaystyle Theta z d over dz This is sometimes also called the homogeneity operator because its eigenfunctions are the monomials in z 8 z k k z k k 0 1 2 displaystyle Theta z k kz k quad k 0 1 2 dots In n variables the homogeneity operator is given by8 k 1 n x k x k displaystyle Theta sum k 1 n x k frac partial partial x k As in one variable the eigenspaces of 8 are the spaces of homogeneous functions Euler s homogeneous function theorem In writing following common mathematical convention the argument of a differential operator is usually placed on the right side of the operator itself Sometimes an alternative notation is used The result of applying the operator to the function on the left side of the operator and on the right side of the operator and the difference obtained when applying the differential operator to the functions on both sides are denoted by arrows as follows f x g g x f displaystyle f overleftarrow partial x g g cdot partial x f f x g f x g displaystyle f overrightarrow partial x g f cdot partial x g f x g f x g g x f displaystyle f overleftrightarrow partial x g f cdot partial x g g cdot partial x f Such a bidirectional arrow notation is frequently used for describing the probability current of quantum mechanics Adjoint of an operator EditSee also Hermitian adjoint Given a linear differential operator T displaystyle T T u k 0 n a k x D k u displaystyle Tu sum k 0 n a k x D k u the adjoint of this operator is defined as the operator T displaystyle T such that T u v u T v displaystyle langle Tu v rangle langle u T v rangle where the notation displaystyle langle cdot cdot rangle is used for the scalar product or inner product This definition therefore depends on the definition of the scalar product or inner product Formal adjoint in one variable Edit In the functional space of square integrable functions on a real interval a b the scalar product is defined by f g a b f x g x d x displaystyle langle f g rangle int a b overline f x g x dx where the line over f x denotes the complex conjugate of f x If one moreover adds the condition that f or g vanishes as x a displaystyle x to a and x b displaystyle x to b one can also define the adjoint of T byT u k 0 n 1 k D k a k x u displaystyle T u sum k 0 n 1 k D k left overline a k x u right This formula does not explicitly depend on the definition of the scalar product It is therefore sometimes chosen as a definition of the adjoint operator When T displaystyle T is defined according to this formula it is called the formal adjoint of T A formally self adjoint operator is an operator equal to its own formal adjoint Several variables Edit If W is a domain in Rn and P a differential operator on W then the adjoint of P is defined in L2 W by duality in the analogous manner f P g L 2 W P f g L 2 W displaystyle langle f P g rangle L 2 Omega langle Pf g rangle L 2 Omega for all smooth L2 functions f g Since smooth functions are dense in L2 this defines the adjoint on a dense subset of L2 P is a densely defined operator Example Edit The Sturm Liouville operator is a well known example of a formal self adjoint operator This second order linear differential operator L can be written in the form L u p u q u p u p u q u p u p u q u p D 2 u p D u q u displaystyle Lu pu qu pu p u qu pu p u qu p D 2 u p Du q u This property can be proven using the formal adjoint definition above 4 This operator is central to Sturm Liouville theory where the eigenfunctions analogues to eigenvectors of this operator are considered Properties of differential operators EditDifferentiation is linear i e D f g D f D g displaystyle D f g Df Dg D a f a D f displaystyle D af a Df where f and g are functions and a is a constant Any polynomial in D with function coefficients is also a differential operator We may also compose differential operators by the rule D 1 D 2 f D 1 D 2 f displaystyle D 1 circ D 2 f D 1 D 2 f Some care is then required firstly any function coefficients in the operator D2 must be differentiable as many times as the application of D1 requires To get a ring of such operators we must assume derivatives of all orders of the coefficients used Secondly this ring will not be commutative an operator gD isn t the same in general as Dg For example we have the relation basic in quantum mechanics D x x D 1 displaystyle Dx xD 1 The subring of operators that are polynomials in D with constant coefficients is by contrast commutative It can be characterised another way it consists of the translation invariant operators The differential operators also obey the shift theorem Ring of polynomial differential operators EditRing of univariate polynomial differential operators Edit Main article Weyl algebra If R is a ring let R D X displaystyle R langle D X rangle be the non commutative polynomial ring over R in the variables D and X and I the two sided ideal generated by DX XD 1 Then the ring of univariate polynomial differential operators over R is the quotient ring R D X I displaystyle R langle D X rangle I This is a non commutative simple ring Every element can be written in a unique way as a R linear combination of monomials of the form X a D b mod I displaystyle X a D b text mod I It supports an analogue of Euclidean division of polynomials Differential modules clarification needed over R X displaystyle R X for the standard derivation can be identified with modules over R D X I displaystyle R langle D X rangle I Ring of multivariate polynomial differential operators Edit If R is a ring let R D 1 D n X 1 X n displaystyle R langle D 1 ldots D n X 1 ldots X n rangle be the non commutative polynomial ring over R in the variables D 1 D n X 1 X n displaystyle D 1 ldots D n X 1 ldots X n and I the two sided ideal generated by the elements D i X j X j D i d i j D i D j D j D i X i X j X j X i displaystyle D i X j X j D i delta i j D i D j D j D i X i X j X j X i for all 1 i j n displaystyle 1 leq i j leq n where d displaystyle delta is Kronecker delta Then the ring of multivariate polynomial differential operators over R is the quotient ring R D 1 D n X 1 X n I displaystyle R langle D 1 ldots D n X 1 ldots X n rangle I This is a non commutative simple ring Every element can be written in a unique way as a R linear combination of monomials of the form X 1 a 1 X n a n D 1 b 1 D n b n displaystyle X 1 a 1 ldots X n a n D 1 b 1 ldots D n b n Coordinate independent description EditIn differential geometry and algebraic geometry it is often convenient to have a coordinate independent description of differential operators between two vector bundles Let E and F be two vector bundles over a differentiable manifold M An R linear mapping of sections P G E G F is said to be a kth order linear differential operator if it factors through the jet bundle Jk E In other words there exists a linear mapping of vector bundles i P J k E F displaystyle i P J k E to F such that P i P j k displaystyle P i P circ j k where jk G E G Jk E is the prolongation that associates to any section of E its k jet This just means that for a given section s of E the value of P s at a point x M is fully determined by the kth order infinitesimal behavior of s in x In particular this implies that P s x is determined by the germ of s in x which is expressed by saying that differential operators are local A foundational result is the Peetre theorem showing that the converse is also true any linear local operator is differential Relation to commutative algebra Edit An equivalent but purely algebraic description of linear differential operators is as follows an R linear map P is a kth order linear differential operator if for any k 1 smooth functions f 0 f k C M displaystyle f 0 ldots f k in C infty M we have f k f k 1 f 0 P 0 displaystyle f k f k 1 cdots f 0 P cdots 0 Here the bracket f P G E G F displaystyle f P Gamma E to Gamma F is defined as the commutator f P s P f s f P s displaystyle f P s P f cdot s f cdot P s This characterization of linear differential operators shows that they are particular mappings between modules over a commutative algebra allowing the concept to be seen as a part of commutative algebra Variants EditA differential operator of infinite order Edit A differential operator of infinite order is roughly a differential operator whose total symbol is a power series instead of a polynomial Bidifferential operator Edit A differential operator acting on two functions D g f displaystyle D g f is called a bidifferential operator The notion appears for instance in an associative algebra structure on a deformation quantization of a Poisson algebra 5 Microdifferential operator Edit A microdifferential operator is a type of operator on an open subset of a cotangent bundle as opposed to an open subset of a manifold It is obtained by extending the notion of a differential operator to the cotangent bundle 6 See also EditDifference operator Delta operator Elliptic operator Curl mathematics Fractional calculus Invariant differential operator Differential calculus over commutative algebras Lagrangian system Spectral theory Energy operator Momentum operator DBAR operator Pseudo differential operator Fundamental solution Atiyah Singer index theorem section on symbol of operator References Edit Schapira 1985 1 1 7 James Gasser editor A Boole Anthology Recent and classical studies in the logic of George Boole 2000 p 169 Google Books E W Weisstein Theta Operator Retrieved 2009 06 12 L u 1 2 D 2 p u 1 1 D p u 1 0 q u D 2 p u D p u q u p u p u q u p u 2 p u p u p u p u q u p u p u q u p u q u L u displaystyle begin aligned L u amp 1 2 D 2 p u 1 1 D p u 1 0 qu amp D 2 pu D p u qu amp pu p u qu amp p u 2p u pu p u p u qu amp p u pu qu amp pu qu amp Lu end aligned Omori Hideki Maeda Y Yoshioka A 1992 Deformation quantization of Poisson algebras www semanticscholar org Schapira 1985 1 2 1 3 Freed Daniel S 1987 Geometry of Dirac operators p 8 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 186 8445 Hormander L 1983 The analysis of linear partial differential operators I Grundl Math Wissenschaft vol 256 Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 642 96750 4 ISBN 3 540 12104 8 MR 0717035 Schapira Pierre 1985 Microdifferential Systems in the Complex Domain Springer Wells R O 1973 Differential analysis on complex manifolds Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 90419 0 Further reading EditFedosov Boris Schulze Bert Wolfgang Tarkhanov Nikolai 2002 Analytic index formulas for elliptic corner operators Annales de l Institut Fourier 52 3 899 982 doi 10 5802 aif 1906 ISSN 1777 5310 External links Edit Media related to Differential operators at Wikimedia Commons Differential operator Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Differential operator amp oldid 1170970755, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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