fbpx
Wikipedia

Green's function for the three-variable Laplace equation

In physics, the Green's function (or fundamental solution) for Laplace's equation in three variables is used to describe the response of a particular type of physical system to a point source. In particular, this Green's function arises in systems that can be described by Poisson's equation, a partial differential equation (PDE) of the form

where is the Laplace operator in , is the source term of the system, and is the solution to the equation. Because is a linear differential operator, the solution to a general system of this type can be written as an integral over a distribution of source given by :

where the Green's function for Laplace's equation in three variables describes the response of the system at the point to a point source located at :

and the point source is given by , the Dirac delta function.

Motivation Edit

One physical system of this type is a charge distribution in electrostatics. In such a system, the electric field is expressed as the negative gradient of the electric potential, and Gauss's law in differential form applies:

 
 

Combining these expressions gives us Poisson's equation:

 

We can find the solution   to this equation for an arbitrary charge distribution by temporarily considering the distribution created by a point charge   located at  :

 

In this case,

 

which shows that   for   will give the response of the system to the point charge  . Therefore, from the discussion above, if we can find the Green's function of this operator, we can find   to be

 

for a general charge distribution.

Mathematical exposition Edit

The free-space Green's function for Laplace's equation in three variables is given in terms of the reciprocal distance between two points and is known as the "Newton kernel" or "Newtonian potential". That is to say, the solution of the equation

 

is

 

where   are the standard Cartesian coordinates in a three-dimensional space, and   is the Dirac delta function.

The algebraic expression of the Green's function for the three-variable Laplace equation, apart from the constant term   expressed in Cartesian coordinates shall be referred to as

 

Many expansion formulas are possible, given the algebraic expression for the Green's function. One of the most well-known of these, the Laplace expansion for the three-variable Laplace equation, is given in terms of the generating function for Legendre polynomials,

 

which has been written in terms of spherical coordinates  . The less than (greater than) notation means, take the primed or unprimed spherical radius depending on which is less than (greater than) the other. The   represents the angle between the two arbitrary vectors   given by

 

The free-space circular cylindrical Green's function (see below) is given in terms of the reciprocal distance between two points. The expression is derived in Jackson's Classical Electrodynamics.[1] Using the Green's function for the three-variable Laplace equation, one can integrate the Poisson equation in order to determine the potential function. Green's functions can be expanded in terms of the basis elements (harmonic functions) which are determined using the separable coordinate systems for the linear partial differential equation. There are many expansions in terms of special functions for the Green's function. In the case of a boundary put at infinity with the boundary condition setting the solution to zero at infinity, then one has an infinite-extent Green's function. For the three-variable Laplace equation, one can for instance expand it in the rotationally invariant coordinate systems which allow separation of variables. For instance:

 

where

 

and   is the odd-half-integer degree Legendre function of the second kind, which is a toroidal harmonic. Here the expansion has been written in terms of cylindrical coordinates  . See for instance Toroidal coordinates.

Using one of the Whipple formulae for toroidal harmonics we can obtain an alternative form of the Green's function

 

in terms for a toroidal harmonic of the first kind.

This formula was used in 1999 for astrophysical applications in a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal, published by Howard Cohl and Joel Tohline.[2] The above-mentioned formula is also known in the engineering community. For instance, a paper written in the Journal of Applied Physics in volume 18, 1947 pages 562-577 shows N.G. De Bruijn and C.J. Boukamp knew of the above relationship. In fact, virtually all the mathematics found in recent papers was already done by Chester Snow. This is found in his book titled Hypergeometric and Legendre Functions with Applications to Integral Equations of Potential Theory, National Bureau of Standards Applied Mathematics Series 19, 1952. Look specifically on pages 228-263. The article by Chester Snow, "Magnetic Fields of Cylindrical Coils and Annular Coils" (National Bureau of Standards, Applied Mathematical Series 38, December 30, 1953), clearly shows the relationship between the free-space Green's function in cylindrical coordinates and the Q-function expression. Likewise, see another one of Snow's pieces of work, titled "Formulas for Computing Capacitance and Inductance", National Bureau of Standards Circular 544, September 10, 1954, pp 13–41. Indeed, not much has been published recently on the subject of toroidal functions and their applications in engineering or physics. However, a number of engineering applications do exist. One application was published; the article was written by J.P. Selvaggi, S. Salon, O. Kwon, and M.V.K. Chari, "Calculating the External Magnetic Field From Permanent Magnets in Permanent-Magnet Motors-An Alternative Method," IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, Vol. 40, No. 5, September 2004. These authors have done extensive work with Legendre functions of the second kind and half-integral degree or toroidal functions of zeroth order. They have solved numerous problems which exhibit circular cylindrical symmetry employing the toroidal functions.

The above expressions for the Green's function for the three-variable Laplace equation are examples of single summation expressions for this Green's function. There are also single-integral expressions for this Green's function. Examples of these can be seen to exist in rotational cylindrical coordinates as an integral Laplace transform in the difference of vertical heights whose kernel is given in terms of the order-zero Bessel function of the first kind as

 

where   are the greater (lesser) variables   and  . Similarly, the Green's function for the three-variable Laplace equation can be given as a Fourier integral cosine transform of the difference of vertical heights whose kernel is given in terms of the order-zero modified Bessel function of the second kind as

 

Rotationally invariant Green's functions for the three-variable Laplace equation Edit

Green's function expansions exist in all of the rotationally invariant coordinate systems which are known to yield solutions to the three-variable Laplace equation through the separation of variables technique.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Jackson's Classical Electrodynamics text 3rd ed. pages 125–127
  2. ^ The Astrophysical Journal, 527, 86–101, published by Howard Cohl and Joel Tohline

green, function, three, variable, laplace, equation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspaper. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Green s function for the three variable Laplace equation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message In physics the Green s function or fundamental solution for Laplace s equation in three variables is used to describe the response of a particular type of physical system to a point source In particular this Green s function arises in systems that can be described by Poisson s equation a partial differential equation PDE of the form 2 u x f x displaystyle nabla 2 u mathbf x f mathbf x where 2 displaystyle nabla 2 is the Laplace operator in R 3 displaystyle mathbb R 3 f x displaystyle f mathbf x is the source term of the system and u x displaystyle u mathbf x is the solution to the equation Because 2 displaystyle nabla 2 is a linear differential operator the solution u x displaystyle u mathbf x to a general system of this type can be written as an integral over a distribution of source given by f x displaystyle f mathbf x u x x G x x f x d x displaystyle u mathbf x int mathbf x G mathbf x mathbf x f mathbf x d mathbf x where the Green s function for Laplace s equation in three variables G x x displaystyle G mathbf x mathbf x describes the response of the system at the point x displaystyle mathbf x to a point source located at x displaystyle mathbf x 2 G x x d x x displaystyle nabla 2 G mathbf x mathbf x delta mathbf x mathbf x and the point source is given by d x x displaystyle delta mathbf x mathbf x the Dirac delta function Contents 1 Motivation 2 Mathematical exposition 3 Rotationally invariant Green s functions for the three variable Laplace equation 4 See also 5 ReferencesMotivation EditOne physical system of this type is a charge distribution in electrostatics In such a system the electric field is expressed as the negative gradient of the electric potential and Gauss s law in differential form applies E ϕ x displaystyle mathbf E mathbf nabla phi mathbf x nbsp E r x e 0 displaystyle mathbf nabla cdot mathbf E frac rho mathbf x varepsilon 0 nbsp Combining these expressions gives us Poisson s equation 2 ϕ x r x e 0 displaystyle mathbf nabla 2 phi mathbf x frac rho mathbf x varepsilon 0 nbsp We can find the solution ϕ x displaystyle phi mathbf x nbsp to this equation for an arbitrary charge distribution by temporarily considering the distribution created by a point charge q displaystyle q nbsp located at x displaystyle mathbf x nbsp r x q d x x displaystyle rho mathbf x q delta mathbf x mathbf x nbsp In this case e 0 q 2 ϕ x d x x displaystyle frac varepsilon 0 q mathbf nabla 2 phi mathbf x delta mathbf x mathbf x nbsp which shows that G x x displaystyle G mathbf x mathbf x nbsp for e 0 q 2 textstyle frac varepsilon 0 q nabla 2 nbsp will give the response of the system to the point charge q displaystyle q nbsp Therefore from the discussion above if we can find the Green s function of this operator we can find ϕ x displaystyle phi mathbf x nbsp to be ϕ x x G x x r x d x displaystyle phi mathbf x int mathbf x G mathbf x mathbf x rho mathbf x d mathbf x nbsp for a general charge distribution Mathematical exposition EditThe free space Green s function for Laplace s equation in three variables is given in terms of the reciprocal distance between two points and is known as the Newton kernel or Newtonian potential That is to say the solution of the equation 2 G x x d x x displaystyle nabla 2 G mathbf x mathbf x delta mathbf x mathbf x nbsp is G x x 1 4 p 1 x x displaystyle G mathbf x mathbf x frac 1 4 pi cdot frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x nbsp where x x y z displaystyle mathbf x x y z nbsp are the standard Cartesian coordinates in a three dimensional space and d displaystyle delta nbsp is the Dirac delta function The algebraic expression of the Green s function for the three variable Laplace equation apart from the constant term 1 4 p displaystyle 1 4 pi nbsp expressed in Cartesian coordinates shall be referred to as 1 x x x x 2 y y 2 z z 2 1 2 displaystyle frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x x x prime 2 y y prime 2 z z prime 2 frac 1 2 nbsp Many expansion formulas are possible given the algebraic expression for the Green s function One of the most well known of these the Laplace expansion for the three variable Laplace equation is given in terms of the generating function for Legendre polynomials 1 x x l 0 r lt l r gt l 1 P l cos g displaystyle frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x sum l 0 infty frac r lt l r gt l 1 P l cos gamma nbsp which has been written in terms of spherical coordinates r 8 f displaystyle r theta varphi nbsp The less than greater than notation means take the primed or unprimed spherical radius depending on which is less than greater than the other The g displaystyle gamma nbsp represents the angle between the two arbitrary vectors x x displaystyle mathbf x mathbf x nbsp given by cos g cos 8 cos 8 sin 8 sin 8 cos f f displaystyle cos gamma cos theta cos theta prime sin theta sin theta prime cos varphi varphi prime nbsp The free space circular cylindrical Green s function see below is given in terms of the reciprocal distance between two points The expression is derived in Jackson s Classical Electrodynamics 1 Using the Green s function for the three variable Laplace equation one can integrate the Poisson equation in order to determine the potential function Green s functions can be expanded in terms of the basis elements harmonic functions which are determined using the separable coordinate systems for the linear partial differential equation There are many expansions in terms of special functions for the Green s function In the case of a boundary put at infinity with the boundary condition setting the solution to zero at infinity then one has an infinite extent Green s function For the three variable Laplace equation one can for instance expand it in the rotationally invariant coordinate systems which allow separation of variables For instance 1 x x 1 p R R m e i m f f Q m 1 2 x displaystyle frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x frac 1 pi sqrt RR prime sum m infty infty e im varphi varphi prime Q m frac 1 2 chi nbsp where x R 2 R 2 z z 2 2 R R displaystyle chi frac R 2 R prime 2 z z prime 2 2RR prime nbsp and Q m 1 2 x displaystyle Q m frac 1 2 chi nbsp is the odd half integer degree Legendre function of the second kind which is a toroidal harmonic Here the expansion has been written in terms of cylindrical coordinates R f z displaystyle R varphi z nbsp See for instance Toroidal coordinates Using one of the Whipple formulae for toroidal harmonics we can obtain an alternative form of the Green s function 1 x x p 2 R R x 2 1 1 2 m 1 m G m 1 2 P 1 2 m x x 2 1 e i m f f displaystyle frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x sqrt frac pi 2RR prime chi 2 1 1 2 sum m infty infty frac 1 m Gamma m 1 2 P frac 1 2 m biggl frac chi sqrt chi 2 1 biggr e im varphi varphi prime nbsp in terms for a toroidal harmonic of the first kind This formula was used in 1999 for astrophysical applications in a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal published by Howard Cohl and Joel Tohline 2 The above mentioned formula is also known in the engineering community For instance a paper written in the Journal of Applied Physics in volume 18 1947 pages 562 577 shows N G De Bruijn and C J Boukamp knew of the above relationship In fact virtually all the mathematics found in recent papers was already done by Chester Snow This is found in his book titled Hypergeometric and Legendre Functions with Applications to Integral Equations of Potential Theory National Bureau of Standards Applied Mathematics Series 19 1952 Look specifically on pages 228 263 The article by Chester Snow Magnetic Fields of Cylindrical Coils and Annular Coils National Bureau of Standards Applied Mathematical Series 38 December 30 1953 clearly shows the relationship between the free space Green s function in cylindrical coordinates and the Q function expression Likewise see another one of Snow s pieces of work titled Formulas for Computing Capacitance and Inductance National Bureau of Standards Circular 544 September 10 1954 pp 13 41 Indeed not much has been published recently on the subject of toroidal functions and their applications in engineering or physics However a number of engineering applications do exist One application was published the article was written by J P Selvaggi S Salon O Kwon and M V K Chari Calculating the External Magnetic Field From Permanent Magnets in Permanent Magnet Motors An Alternative Method IEEE Transactions on Magnetics Vol 40 No 5 September 2004 These authors have done extensive work with Legendre functions of the second kind and half integral degree or toroidal functions of zeroth order They have solved numerous problems which exhibit circular cylindrical symmetry employing the toroidal functions The above expressions for the Green s function for the three variable Laplace equation are examples of single summation expressions for this Green s function There are also single integral expressions for this Green s function Examples of these can be seen to exist in rotational cylindrical coordinates as an integral Laplace transform in the difference of vertical heights whose kernel is given in terms of the order zero Bessel function of the first kind as 1 x x 0 J 0 k R 2 R 2 2 R R cos f f e k z gt z lt d k displaystyle frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x int 0 infty J 0 biggl k sqrt R 2 R prime 2 2RR prime cos varphi varphi prime biggr e k z gt z lt dk nbsp where z gt z lt displaystyle z gt z lt nbsp are the greater lesser variables z displaystyle z nbsp and z displaystyle z prime nbsp Similarly the Green s function for the three variable Laplace equation can be given as a Fourier integral cosine transform of the difference of vertical heights whose kernel is given in terms of the order zero modified Bessel function of the second kind as 1 x x 2 p 0 K 0 k R 2 R 2 2 R R cos f f cos k z z d k displaystyle frac 1 mathbf x mathbf x frac 2 pi int 0 infty K 0 biggl k sqrt R 2 R prime 2 2RR prime cos varphi varphi prime biggr cos k z z prime dk nbsp Rotationally invariant Green s functions for the three variable Laplace equation EditGreen s function expansions exist in all of the rotationally invariant coordinate systems which are known to yield solutions to the three variable Laplace equation through the separation of variables technique cylindrical coordinates spherical coordinates Prolate spheroidal coordinates Oblate spheroidal coordinates Parabolic coordinates Toroidal coordinates Bispherical coordinates Flat ring cyclide coordinates Flat disk cyclide coordinates Bi cyclide coordinates Cap cyclide coordinatesSee also EditNewtonian potential Laplace expansionReferences Edit Jackson s Classical Electrodynamics text 3rd ed pages 125 127 The Astrophysical Journal 527 86 101 published by Howard Cohl and Joel Tohline Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Green 27s function for the three variable Laplace equation amp oldid 1106599363, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.