fbpx
Wikipedia

Laplace operator

In mathematics, the Laplace operator or Laplacian is a differential operator given by the divergence of the gradient of a scalar function on Euclidean space. It is usually denoted by the symbols , (where is the nabla operator), or . In a Cartesian coordinate system, the Laplacian is given by the sum of second partial derivatives of the function with respect to each independent variable. In other coordinate systems, such as cylindrical and spherical coordinates, the Laplacian also has a useful form. Informally, the Laplacian Δf (p) of a function f at a point p measures by how much the average value of f over small spheres or balls centered at p deviates from f (p).

The Laplace operator is named after the French mathematician Pierre-Simon de Laplace (1749–1827), who first applied the operator to the study of celestial mechanics: the Laplacian of the gravitational potential due to a given mass density distribution is a constant multiple of that density distribution. Solutions of Laplace's equation Δf = 0 are called harmonic functions and represent the possible gravitational potentials in regions of vacuum.

The Laplacian occurs in many differential equations describing physical phenomena. Poisson's equation describes electric and gravitational potentials; the diffusion equation describes heat and fluid flow, the wave equation describes wave propagation, and the Schrödinger equation in quantum mechanics. In image processing and computer vision, the Laplacian operator has been used for various tasks, such as blob and edge detection. The Laplacian is the simplest elliptic operator and is at the core of Hodge theory as well as the results of de Rham cohomology.

Definition

The Laplace operator is a second-order differential operator in the n-dimensional Euclidean space, defined as the divergence ( ) of the gradient ( ). Thus if   is a twice-differentiable real-valued function, then the Laplacian of   is the real-valued function defined by:

 

 

 

 

 

(1)

where the latter notations derive from formally writing:

 
Explicitly, the Laplacian of f is thus the sum of all the unmixed second partial derivatives in the Cartesian coordinates xi:
 

 

 

 

 

(2)

As a second-order differential operator, the Laplace operator maps Ck functions to Ck−2 functions for k ≥ 2. It is a linear operator Δ : Ck(Rn) → Ck−2(Rn), or more generally, an operator Δ : Ck(Ω) → Ck−2(Ω) for any open set Ω ⊆ Rn.

Motivation

Diffusion

In the physical theory of diffusion, the Laplace operator arises naturally in the mathematical description of equilibrium.[1] Specifically, if u is the density at equilibrium of some quantity such as a chemical concentration, then the net flux of u through the boundary V of any smooth region V is zero, provided there is no source or sink within V:

 
where n is the outward unit normal to the boundary of V. By the divergence theorem,
 

Since this holds for all smooth regions V, one can show that it implies:

 
The left-hand side of this equation is the Laplace operator, and the entire equation Δu = 0 is known as Laplace's equation. Solutions of the Laplace equation, i.e. functions whose Laplacian is identically zero, thus represent possible equilibrium densities under diffusion.

The Laplace operator itself has a physical interpretation for non-equilibrium diffusion as the extent to which a point represents a source or sink of chemical concentration, in a sense made precise by the diffusion equation. This interpretation of the Laplacian is also explained by the following fact about averages.

Averages

Given a twice continuously differentiable function  , a point   and a real number  , we let   be the average value of   over the ball with radius   centered at  , and   be the average value of   over the sphere (the boundary of a ball) with radius   centered at  . Then we have:[2]

 
and
 

Density associated with a potential

If φ denotes the electrostatic potential associated to a charge distribution q, then the charge distribution itself is given by the negative of the Laplacian of φ:

 
where ε0 is the electric constant.

This is a consequence of Gauss's law. Indeed, if V is any smooth region with boundary V, then by Gauss's law the flux of the electrostatic field E across the boundary is proportional to the charge enclosed:

 
where the first equality is due to the divergence theorem. Since the electrostatic field is the (negative) gradient of the potential, this gives:
 

Since this holds for all regions V, we must have

 

The same approach implies that the negative of the Laplacian of the gravitational potential is the mass distribution. Often the charge (or mass) distribution are given, and the associated potential is unknown. Finding the potential function subject to suitable boundary conditions is equivalent to solving Poisson's equation.

Energy minimization

Another motivation for the Laplacian appearing in physics is that solutions to Δf = 0 in a region U are functions that make the Dirichlet energy functional stationary:

 

To see this, suppose f : UR is a function, and u : UR is a function that vanishes on the boundary of U. Then:

 

where the last equality follows using Green's first identity. This calculation shows that if Δf = 0, then E is stationary around f. Conversely, if E is stationary around f, then Δf = 0 by the fundamental lemma of calculus of variations.

Coordinate expressions

Two dimensions

The Laplace operator in two dimensions is given by:

In Cartesian coordinates,

 
where x and y are the standard Cartesian coordinates of the xy-plane.

In polar coordinates,

 
where r represents the radial distance and θ the angle.

Three dimensions

In three dimensions, it is common to work with the Laplacian in a variety of different coordinate systems.

In Cartesian coordinates,

 

In cylindrical coordinates,

 
where   represents the radial distance, φ the azimuth angle and z the height.

In spherical coordinates:

 
or
 
where φ represents the azimuthal angle and θ the zenith angle or co-latitude.

In general curvilinear coordinates (ξ1, ξ2, ξ3):

 

where summation over the repeated indices is implied, gmn is the inverse metric tensor and Γl mn are the Christoffel symbols for the selected coordinates.

N dimensions

In arbitrary curvilinear coordinates in N dimensions (ξ1, …, ξN), we can write the Laplacian in terms of the inverse metric tensor,  :

 
from the Voss-Weyl formula[3] for the divergence.

In spherical coordinates in N dimensions, with the parametrization x = RN with r representing a positive real radius and θ an element of the unit sphere SN−1,

 
where ΔSN−1 is the Laplace–Beltrami operator on the (N − 1)-sphere, known as the spherical Laplacian. The two radial derivative terms can be equivalently rewritten as:
 

As a consequence, the spherical Laplacian of a function defined on SN−1RN can be computed as the ordinary Laplacian of the function extended to RN∖{0} so that it is constant along rays, i.e., homogeneous of degree zero.

Euclidean invariance

The Laplacian is invariant under all Euclidean transformations: rotations and translations. In two dimensions, for example, this means that:

 
for all θ, a, and b. In arbitrary dimensions,
 
whenever ρ is a rotation, and likewise:
 
whenever τ is a translation. (More generally, this remains true when ρ is an orthogonal transformation such as a reflection.)

In fact, the algebra of all scalar linear differential operators, with constant coefficients, that commute with all Euclidean transformations, is the polynomial algebra generated by the Laplace operator.

Spectral theory

The spectrum of the Laplace operator consists of all eigenvalues λ for which there is a corresponding eigenfunction f with:

 

This is known as the Helmholtz equation.

If Ω is a bounded domain in Rn, then the eigenfunctions of the Laplacian are an orthonormal basis for the Hilbert space L2(Ω). This result essentially follows from the spectral theorem on compact self-adjoint operators, applied to the inverse of the Laplacian (which is compact, by the Poincaré inequality and the Rellich–Kondrachov theorem).[4] It can also be shown that the eigenfunctions are infinitely differentiable functions.[5] More generally, these results hold for the Laplace–Beltrami operator on any compact Riemannian manifold with boundary, or indeed for the Dirichlet eigenvalue problem of any elliptic operator with smooth coefficients on a bounded domain. When Ω is the n-sphere, the eigenfunctions of the Laplacian are the spherical harmonics.

Vector Laplacian

The vector Laplace operator, also denoted by  , is a differential operator defined over a vector field.[6] The vector Laplacian is similar to the scalar Laplacian; whereas the scalar Laplacian applies to a scalar field and returns a scalar quantity, the vector Laplacian applies to a vector field, returning a vector quantity. When computed in orthonormal Cartesian coordinates, the returned vector field is equal to the vector field of the scalar Laplacian applied to each vector component.

The vector Laplacian of a vector field   is defined as

 

In Cartesian coordinates, this reduces to the much simpler form as

 
where  ,  , and   are the components of the vector field  , and   just on the left of each vector field component is the (scalar) Laplace operator. This can be seen to be a special case of Lagrange's formula; see Vector triple product.

For expressions of the vector Laplacian in other coordinate systems see Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates.

Generalization

The Laplacian of any tensor field   ("tensor" includes scalar and vector) is defined as the divergence of the gradient of the tensor:

 

For the special case where   is a scalar (a tensor of degree zero), the Laplacian takes on the familiar form.

If   is a vector (a tensor of first degree), the gradient is a covariant derivative which results in a tensor of second degree, and the divergence of this is again a vector. The formula for the vector Laplacian above may be used to avoid tensor math and may be shown to be equivalent to the divergence of the Jacobian matrix shown below for the gradient of a vector:

 

And, in the same manner, a dot product, which evaluates to a vector, of a vector by the gradient of another vector (a tensor of 2nd degree) can be seen as a product of matrices:

 
This identity is a coordinate dependent result, and is not general.

Use in physics

An example of the usage of the vector Laplacian is the Navier-Stokes equations for a Newtonian incompressible flow:

 
where the term with the vector Laplacian of the velocity field   represents the viscous stresses in the fluid.

Another example is the wave equation for the electric field that can be derived from Maxwell's equations in the absence of charges and currents:

 

This equation can also be written as:

 
where
 
is the D'Alembertian, used in the Klein–Gordon equation.

Generalizations

A version of the Laplacian can be defined wherever the Dirichlet energy functional makes sense, which is the theory of Dirichlet forms. For spaces with additional structure, one can give more explicit descriptions of the Laplacian, as follows.

Laplace–Beltrami operator

The Laplacian also can be generalized to an elliptic operator called the Laplace–Beltrami operator defined on a Riemannian manifold. The Laplace–Beltrami operator, when applied to a function, is the trace (tr) of the function's Hessian:

 
where the trace is taken with respect to the inverse of the metric tensor. The Laplace–Beltrami operator also can be generalized to an operator (also called the Laplace–Beltrami operator) which operates on tensor fields, by a similar formula.

Another generalization of the Laplace operator that is available on pseudo-Riemannian manifolds uses the exterior derivative, in terms of which the "geometer's Laplacian" is expressed as

 

Here δ is the codifferential, which can also be expressed in terms of the Hodge star and the exterior derivative. This operator differs in sign from the "analyst's Laplacian" defined above. More generally, the "Hodge" Laplacian is defined on differential forms α by

 

This is known as the Laplace–de Rham operator, which is related to the Laplace–Beltrami operator by the Weitzenböck identity.

D'Alembertian

The Laplacian can be generalized in certain ways to non-Euclidean spaces, where it may be elliptic, hyperbolic, or ultrahyperbolic.

In Minkowski space the Laplace–Beltrami operator becomes the D'Alembert operator   or D'Alembertian:

 

It is the generalization of the Laplace operator in the sense that it is the differential operator which is invariant under the isometry group of the underlying space and it reduces to the Laplace operator if restricted to time-independent functions. The overall sign of the metric here is chosen such that the spatial parts of the operator admit a negative sign, which is the usual convention in high-energy particle physics. The D'Alembert operator is also known as the wave operator because it is the differential operator appearing in the wave equations, and it is also part of the Klein–Gordon equation, which reduces to the wave equation in the massless case.

The additional factor of c in the metric is needed in physics if space and time are measured in different units; a similar factor would be required if, for example, the x direction were measured in meters while the y direction were measured in centimeters. Indeed, theoretical physicists usually work in units such that c = 1 in order to simplify the equation.

The d'Alembert operator generalizes to a hyperbolic operator on pseudo-Riemannian manifolds.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Evans 1998, §2.2
  2. ^ Ovall, Jeffrey S. (2016-03-01). "The Laplacian and Mean and Extreme Values" (PDF). The American Mathematical Monthly. 123 (3): 287–291. doi:10.4169/amer.math.monthly.123.3.287. S2CID 124943537.
  3. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : Grinfeld, Pavel. "The Voss-Weyl Formula". YouTube. Retrieved 9 January 2018.
  4. ^ Gilbarg & Trudinger 2001, Theorem 8.6
  5. ^ Gilbarg & Trudinger 2001, Corollary 8.11
  6. ^ MathWorld. "Vector Laplacian".

References

  • Evans, L. (1998), Partial Differential Equations, American Mathematical Society, ISBN 978-0-8218-0772-9
  • The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol. II Ch. 12: Electrostatic Analogs
  • Gilbarg, D.; Trudinger, N. (2001), Elliptic Partial Differential Equations of Second Order, Springer, ISBN 978-3-540-41160-4.
  • Schey, H. M. (1996), Div, Grad, Curl, and All That, W. W. Norton, ISBN 978-0-393-96997-9.

Further reading

  • http://farside.ph.utexas.edu/teaching/em/lectures/node23.html

External links

laplace, operator, this, article, about, mathematical, operator, scalar, fields, operation, vector, fields, vector, laplacian, laplace, probability, distribution, laplace, distribution, graph, theoretical, notion, laplacian, matrix, other, senses, term, square. This article is about the mathematical operator on scalar fields For the operation on vector fields see Vector Laplacian For the Laplace probability distribution see Laplace distribution For graph theoretical notion see Laplacian matrix For other senses of the term see Del squared a disambiguation page In mathematics the Laplace operator or Laplacian is a differential operator given by the divergence of the gradient of a scalar function on Euclidean space It is usually denoted by the symbols displaystyle nabla cdot nabla 2 displaystyle nabla 2 where displaystyle nabla is the nabla operator or D displaystyle Delta In a Cartesian coordinate system the Laplacian is given by the sum of second partial derivatives of the function with respect to each independent variable In other coordinate systems such as cylindrical and spherical coordinates the Laplacian also has a useful form Informally the Laplacian Df p of a function f at a point p measures by how much the average value of f over small spheres or balls centered at p deviates from f p The Laplace operator is named after the French mathematician Pierre Simon de Laplace 1749 1827 who first applied the operator to the study of celestial mechanics the Laplacian of the gravitational potential due to a given mass density distribution is a constant multiple of that density distribution Solutions of Laplace s equation Df 0 are called harmonic functions and represent the possible gravitational potentials in regions of vacuum The Laplacian occurs in many differential equations describing physical phenomena Poisson s equation describes electric and gravitational potentials the diffusion equation describes heat and fluid flow the wave equation describes wave propagation and the Schrodinger equation in quantum mechanics In image processing and computer vision the Laplacian operator has been used for various tasks such as blob and edge detection The Laplacian is the simplest elliptic operator and is at the core of Hodge theory as well as the results of de Rham cohomology Contents 1 Definition 2 Motivation 2 1 Diffusion 2 2 Averages 2 3 Density associated with a potential 2 4 Energy minimization 3 Coordinate expressions 3 1 Two dimensions 3 2 Three dimensions 3 3 N dimensions 4 Euclidean invariance 5 Spectral theory 6 Vector Laplacian 6 1 Generalization 6 2 Use in physics 7 Generalizations 7 1 Laplace Beltrami operator 7 2 D Alembertian 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinition EditThe Laplace operator is a second order differential operator in the n dimensional Euclidean space defined as the divergence displaystyle nabla cdot of the gradient f displaystyle nabla f Thus if f displaystyle f is a twice differentiable real valued function then the Laplacian of f displaystyle f is the real valued function defined by D f 2 f f displaystyle Delta f nabla 2 f nabla cdot nabla f 1 where the latter notations derive from formally writing x 1 x n displaystyle nabla left frac partial partial x 1 ldots frac partial partial x n right Explicitly the Laplacian of f is thus the sum of all the unmixed second partial derivatives in the Cartesian coordinates xi D f i 1 n 2 f x i 2 displaystyle Delta f sum i 1 n frac partial 2 f partial x i 2 2 As a second order differential operator the Laplace operator maps Ck functions to Ck 2 functions for k 2 It is a linear operator D Ck Rn Ck 2 Rn or more generally an operator D Ck W Ck 2 W for any open set W Rn Motivation EditDiffusion Edit In the physical theory of diffusion the Laplace operator arises naturally in the mathematical description of equilibrium 1 Specifically if u is the density at equilibrium of some quantity such as a chemical concentration then the net flux of u through the boundary V of any smooth region V is zero provided there is no source or sink within V V u n d S 0 displaystyle int partial V nabla u cdot mathbf n dS 0 where n is the outward unit normal to the boundary of V By the divergence theorem V div u d V V u n d S 0 displaystyle int V operatorname div nabla u dV int partial V nabla u cdot mathbf n dS 0 Since this holds for all smooth regions V one can show that it implies div u D u 0 displaystyle operatorname div nabla u Delta u 0 The left hand side of this equation is the Laplace operator and the entire equation Du 0 is known as Laplace s equation Solutions of the Laplace equation i e functions whose Laplacian is identically zero thus represent possible equilibrium densities under diffusion The Laplace operator itself has a physical interpretation for non equilibrium diffusion as the extent to which a point represents a source or sink of chemical concentration in a sense made precise by the diffusion equation This interpretation of the Laplacian is also explained by the following fact about averages Averages Edit Given a twice continuously differentiable function f R n R displaystyle f mathbb R n to mathbb R a point p R n displaystyle p in mathbb R n and a real number h gt 0 displaystyle h gt 0 we let f B p h displaystyle overline f B p h be the average value of f displaystyle f over the ball with radius h displaystyle h centered at p displaystyle p and f S p h displaystyle overline f S p h be the average value of f displaystyle f over the sphere the boundary of a ball with radius h displaystyle h centered at p displaystyle p Then we have 2 f B p h f p D f p 2 n 2 h 2 o h 2 for h 0 displaystyle overline f B p h f p frac Delta f p 2 n 2 h 2 o h 2 quad text for h to 0 and f S p h f p D f p 2 n h 2 o h 2 for h 0 displaystyle overline f S p h f p frac Delta f p 2n h 2 o h 2 quad text for h to 0 Density associated with a potential Edit If f denotes the electrostatic potential associated to a charge distribution q then the charge distribution itself is given by the negative of the Laplacian of f q e 0 D f displaystyle q varepsilon 0 Delta varphi where e0 is the electric constant This is a consequence of Gauss s law Indeed if V is any smooth region with boundary V then by Gauss s law the flux of the electrostatic field E across the boundary is proportional to the charge enclosed V E n d S V div E d V 1 e 0 V q d V displaystyle int partial V mathbf E cdot mathbf n dS int V operatorname div mathbf E dV frac 1 varepsilon 0 int V q dV where the first equality is due to the divergence theorem Since the electrostatic field is the negative gradient of the potential this gives V div grad f d V 1 e 0 V q d V displaystyle int V operatorname div operatorname grad varphi dV frac 1 varepsilon 0 int V q dV Since this holds for all regions V we must havediv grad f 1 e 0 q displaystyle operatorname div operatorname grad varphi frac 1 varepsilon 0 q The same approach implies that the negative of the Laplacian of the gravitational potential is the mass distribution Often the charge or mass distribution are given and the associated potential is unknown Finding the potential function subject to suitable boundary conditions is equivalent to solving Poisson s equation Energy minimization Edit Another motivation for the Laplacian appearing in physics is that solutions to Df 0 in a region U are functions that make the Dirichlet energy functional stationary E f 1 2 U f 2 d x displaystyle E f frac 1 2 int U lVert nabla f rVert 2 dx To see this suppose f U R is a function and u U R is a function that vanishes on the boundary of U Then d d e e 0 E f e u U f u d x U u D f d x displaystyle left frac d d varepsilon right varepsilon 0 E f varepsilon u int U nabla f cdot nabla u dx int U u Delta f dx where the last equality follows using Green s first identity This calculation shows that if Df 0 then E is stationary around f Conversely if E is stationary around f then Df 0 by the fundamental lemma of calculus of variations Coordinate expressions EditTwo dimensions Edit The Laplace operator in two dimensions is given by In Cartesian coordinates D f 2 f x 2 2 f y 2 displaystyle Delta f frac partial 2 f partial x 2 frac partial 2 f partial y 2 where x and y are the standard Cartesian coordinates of the xy plane In polar coordinates D f 1 r r r f r 1 r 2 2 f 8 2 2 f r 2 1 r f r 1 r 2 2 f 8 2 displaystyle begin aligned Delta f amp frac 1 r frac partial partial r left r frac partial f partial r right frac 1 r 2 frac partial 2 f partial theta 2 amp frac partial 2 f partial r 2 frac 1 r frac partial f partial r frac 1 r 2 frac partial 2 f partial theta 2 end aligned where r represents the radial distance and 8 the angle Three dimensions Edit See also Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates In three dimensions it is common to work with the Laplacian in a variety of different coordinate systems In Cartesian coordinates D f 2 f x 2 2 f y 2 2 f z 2 displaystyle Delta f frac partial 2 f partial x 2 frac partial 2 f partial y 2 frac partial 2 f partial z 2 In cylindrical coordinates D f 1 r r r f r 1 r 2 2 f f 2 2 f z 2 displaystyle Delta f frac 1 rho frac partial partial rho left rho frac partial f partial rho right frac 1 rho 2 frac partial 2 f partial varphi 2 frac partial 2 f partial z 2 where r displaystyle rho represents the radial distance f the azimuth angle and z the height In spherical coordinates D f 1 r 2 r r 2 f r 1 r 2 sin 8 8 sin 8 f 8 1 r 2 sin 2 8 2 f f 2 displaystyle Delta f frac 1 r 2 frac partial partial r left r 2 frac partial f partial r right frac 1 r 2 sin theta frac partial partial theta left sin theta frac partial f partial theta right frac 1 r 2 sin 2 theta frac partial 2 f partial varphi 2 or D f 1 r 2 r 2 r f 1 r 2 sin 8 8 sin 8 f 8 1 r 2 sin 2 8 2 f f 2 displaystyle Delta f frac 1 r frac partial 2 partial r 2 rf frac 1 r 2 sin theta frac partial partial theta left sin theta frac partial f partial theta right frac 1 r 2 sin 2 theta frac partial 2 f partial varphi 2 where f represents the azimuthal angle and 8 the zenith angle or co latitude In general curvilinear coordinates 31 32 33 D 3 m 3 n 2 3 m 3 n 2 3 m 3 m g m n 2 3 m 3 n G m n l 3 l displaystyle Delta nabla xi m cdot nabla xi n frac partial 2 partial xi m partial xi n nabla 2 xi m frac partial partial xi m g mn left frac partial 2 partial xi m partial xi n Gamma mn l frac partial partial xi l right where summation over the repeated indices is implied gmn is the inverse metric tensor and Gl mn are the Christoffel symbols for the selected coordinates N dimensions Edit In arbitrary curvilinear coordinates in N dimensions 31 3N we can write the Laplacian in terms of the inverse metric tensor g i j displaystyle g ij D 1 det g 3 i det g g i j 3 j displaystyle Delta frac 1 sqrt det g frac partial partial xi i left sqrt det g g ij frac partial partial xi j right from the Voss Weyl formula 3 for the divergence In spherical coordinates in N dimensions with the parametrization x r8 RN with r representing a positive real radius and 8 an element of the unit sphere SN 1 D f 2 f r 2 N 1 r f r 1 r 2 D S N 1 f displaystyle Delta f frac partial 2 f partial r 2 frac N 1 r frac partial f partial r frac 1 r 2 Delta S N 1 f where DSN 1 is the Laplace Beltrami operator on the N 1 sphere known as the spherical Laplacian The two radial derivative terms can be equivalently rewritten as 1 r N 1 r r N 1 f r displaystyle frac 1 r N 1 frac partial partial r left r N 1 frac partial f partial r right As a consequence the spherical Laplacian of a function defined on SN 1 RN can be computed as the ordinary Laplacian of the function extended to RN 0 so that it is constant along rays i e homogeneous of degree zero Euclidean invariance EditThe Laplacian is invariant under all Euclidean transformations rotations and translations In two dimensions for example this means that D f x cos 8 y sin 8 a x sin 8 y cos 8 b D f x cos 8 y sin 8 a x sin 8 y cos 8 b displaystyle Delta f x cos theta y sin theta a x sin theta y cos theta b Delta f x cos theta y sin theta a x sin theta y cos theta b for all 8 a and b In arbitrary dimensions D f r D f r displaystyle Delta f circ rho Delta f circ rho whenever r is a rotation and likewise D f t D f t displaystyle Delta f circ tau Delta f circ tau whenever t is a translation More generally this remains true when r is an orthogonal transformation such as a reflection In fact the algebra of all scalar linear differential operators with constant coefficients that commute with all Euclidean transformations is the polynomial algebra generated by the Laplace operator Spectral theory EditSee also Hearing the shape of a drum and Dirichlet eigenvalue The spectrum of the Laplace operator consists of all eigenvalues l for which there is a corresponding eigenfunction f with D f l f displaystyle Delta f lambda f This is known as the Helmholtz equation If W is a bounded domain in Rn then the eigenfunctions of the Laplacian are an orthonormal basis for the Hilbert space L2 W This result essentially follows from the spectral theorem on compact self adjoint operators applied to the inverse of the Laplacian which is compact by the Poincare inequality and the Rellich Kondrachov theorem 4 It can also be shown that the eigenfunctions are infinitely differentiable functions 5 More generally these results hold for the Laplace Beltrami operator on any compact Riemannian manifold with boundary or indeed for the Dirichlet eigenvalue problem of any elliptic operator with smooth coefficients on a bounded domain When W is the n sphere the eigenfunctions of the Laplacian are the spherical harmonics Vector Laplacian EditThe vector Laplace operator also denoted by 2 displaystyle nabla 2 is a differential operator defined over a vector field 6 The vector Laplacian is similar to the scalar Laplacian whereas the scalar Laplacian applies to a scalar field and returns a scalar quantity the vector Laplacian applies to a vector field returning a vector quantity When computed in orthonormal Cartesian coordinates the returned vector field is equal to the vector field of the scalar Laplacian applied to each vector component The vector Laplacian of a vector field A displaystyle mathbf A is defined as 2 A A A displaystyle nabla 2 mathbf A nabla nabla cdot mathbf A nabla times nabla times mathbf A In Cartesian coordinates this reduces to the much simpler form as 2 A 2 A x 2 A y 2 A z displaystyle nabla 2 mathbf A nabla 2 A x nabla 2 A y nabla 2 A z where A x displaystyle A x A y displaystyle A y and A z displaystyle A z are the components of the vector field A displaystyle mathbf A and 2 displaystyle nabla 2 just on the left of each vector field component is the scalar Laplace operator This can be seen to be a special case of Lagrange s formula see Vector triple product For expressions of the vector Laplacian in other coordinate systems see Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates Generalization Edit The Laplacian of any tensor field T displaystyle mathbf T tensor includes scalar and vector is defined as the divergence of the gradient of the tensor 2 T T displaystyle nabla 2 mathbf T nabla cdot nabla mathbf T For the special case where T displaystyle mathbf T is a scalar a tensor of degree zero the Laplacian takes on the familiar form If T displaystyle mathbf T is a vector a tensor of first degree the gradient is a covariant derivative which results in a tensor of second degree and the divergence of this is again a vector The formula for the vector Laplacian above may be used to avoid tensor math and may be shown to be equivalent to the divergence of the Jacobian matrix shown below for the gradient of a vector T T x T y T z T x x T x y T x z T y x T y y T y z T z x T z y T z z where T u v T u v displaystyle nabla mathbf T nabla T x nabla T y nabla T z begin bmatrix T xx amp T xy amp T xz T yx amp T yy amp T yz T zx amp T zy amp T zz end bmatrix text where T uv equiv frac partial T u partial v And in the same manner a dot product which evaluates to a vector of a vector by the gradient of another vector a tensor of 2nd degree can be seen as a product of matrices A B A x A y A z B A B x A B y A B z displaystyle mathbf A cdot nabla mathbf B begin bmatrix A x amp A y amp A z end bmatrix nabla mathbf B begin bmatrix mathbf A cdot nabla B x amp mathbf A cdot nabla B y amp mathbf A cdot nabla B z end bmatrix This identity is a coordinate dependent result and is not general Use in physics Edit An example of the usage of the vector Laplacian is the Navier Stokes equations for a Newtonian incompressible flow r v t v v r f p m 2 v displaystyle rho left frac partial mathbf v partial t mathbf v cdot nabla mathbf v right rho mathbf f nabla p mu left nabla 2 mathbf v right where the term with the vector Laplacian of the velocity field m 2 v displaystyle mu left nabla 2 mathbf v right represents the viscous stresses in the fluid Another example is the wave equation for the electric field that can be derived from Maxwell s equations in the absence of charges and currents 2 E m 0 ϵ 0 2 E t 2 0 displaystyle nabla 2 mathbf E mu 0 epsilon 0 frac partial 2 mathbf E partial t 2 0 This equation can also be written as E 0 displaystyle Box mathbf E 0 where 1 c 2 2 t 2 2 displaystyle Box equiv frac 1 c 2 frac partial 2 partial t 2 nabla 2 is the D Alembertian used in the Klein Gordon equation Generalizations EditA version of the Laplacian can be defined wherever the Dirichlet energy functional makes sense which is the theory of Dirichlet forms For spaces with additional structure one can give more explicit descriptions of the Laplacian as follows Laplace Beltrami operator Edit Main article Laplace Beltrami operator The Laplacian also can be generalized to an elliptic operator called the Laplace Beltrami operator defined on a Riemannian manifold The Laplace Beltrami operator when applied to a function is the trace tr of the function s Hessian D f tr H f displaystyle Delta f operatorname tr big H f big where the trace is taken with respect to the inverse of the metric tensor The Laplace Beltrami operator also can be generalized to an operator also called the Laplace Beltrami operator which operates on tensor fields by a similar formula Another generalization of the Laplace operator that is available on pseudo Riemannian manifolds uses the exterior derivative in terms of which the geometer s Laplacian is expressed asD f d d f displaystyle Delta f delta df Here d is the codifferential which can also be expressed in terms of the Hodge star and the exterior derivative This operator differs in sign from the analyst s Laplacian defined above More generally the Hodge Laplacian is defined on differential forms a byD a d d a d d a displaystyle Delta alpha delta d alpha d delta alpha This is known as the Laplace de Rham operator which is related to the Laplace Beltrami operator by the Weitzenbock identity D Alembertian Edit The Laplacian can be generalized in certain ways to non Euclidean spaces where it may be elliptic hyperbolic or ultrahyperbolic In Minkowski space the Laplace Beltrami operator becomes the D Alembert operator displaystyle Box or D Alembertian 1 c 2 2 t 2 2 x 2 2 y 2 2 z 2 displaystyle square frac 1 c 2 frac partial 2 partial t 2 frac partial 2 partial x 2 frac partial 2 partial y 2 frac partial 2 partial z 2 It is the generalization of the Laplace operator in the sense that it is the differential operator which is invariant under the isometry group of the underlying space and it reduces to the Laplace operator if restricted to time independent functions The overall sign of the metric here is chosen such that the spatial parts of the operator admit a negative sign which is the usual convention in high energy particle physics The D Alembert operator is also known as the wave operator because it is the differential operator appearing in the wave equations and it is also part of the Klein Gordon equation which reduces to the wave equation in the massless case The additional factor of c in the metric is needed in physics if space and time are measured in different units a similar factor would be required if for example the x direction were measured in meters while the y direction were measured in centimeters Indeed theoretical physicists usually work in units such that c 1 in order to simplify the equation The d Alembert operator generalizes to a hyperbolic operator on pseudo Riemannian manifolds See also EditLaplace Beltrami operator generalization to submanifolds in Euclidean space and Riemannian and pseudo Riemannian manifold The vector Laplacian operator a generalization of the Laplacian to vector fields The Laplacian in differential geometry The discrete Laplace operator is a finite difference analog of the continuous Laplacian defined on graphs and grids The Laplacian is a common operator in image processing and computer vision see the Laplacian of Gaussian blob detector and scale space The list of formulas in Riemannian geometry contains expressions for the Laplacian in terms of Christoffel symbols Weyl s lemma Laplace equation Earnshaw s theorem which shows that stable static gravitational electrostatic or magnetic suspension is impossible Del in cylindrical and spherical coordinates Other situations in which a Laplacian is defined are analysis on fractals time scale calculus and discrete exterior calculus Notes Edit Evans 1998 2 2 Ovall Jeffrey S 2016 03 01 The Laplacian and Mean and Extreme Values PDF The American Mathematical Monthly 123 3 287 291 doi 10 4169 amer math monthly 123 3 287 S2CID 124943537 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Grinfeld Pavel The Voss Weyl Formula YouTube Retrieved 9 January 2018 Gilbarg amp Trudinger 2001 Theorem 8 6 Gilbarg amp Trudinger 2001 Corollary 8 11 MathWorld Vector Laplacian References EditEvans L 1998 Partial Differential Equations American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 0772 9 The Feynman Lectures on Physics Vol II Ch 12 Electrostatic Analogs Gilbarg D Trudinger N 2001 Elliptic Partial Differential Equations of Second Order Springer ISBN 978 3 540 41160 4 Schey H M 1996 Div Grad Curl and All That W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 96997 9 Further reading Edithttp farside ph utexas edu teaching em lectures node23 htmlExternal links Edit Laplace operator Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Weisstein Eric W Laplacian MathWorld Laplacian in polar coordinates derivation equations on the fractal cubes and Casimir effect Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laplace operator amp oldid 1127277109, 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.