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Orthogonal coordinates

In mathematics, orthogonal coordinates are defined as a set of d coordinates in which the coordinate hypersurfaces all meet at right angles (note that superscripts are indices, not exponents). A coordinate surface for a particular coordinate qk is the curve, surface, or hypersurface on which qk is a constant. For example, the three-dimensional Cartesian coordinates (x, y, z) is an orthogonal coordinate system, since its coordinate surfaces x = constant, y = constant, and z = constant are planes that meet at right angles to one another, i.e., are perpendicular. Orthogonal coordinates are a special but extremely common case of curvilinear coordinates.

Motivation Edit

 
A conformal map acting on a rectangular grid. Note that the orthogonality of the curved grid is retained.

While vector operations and physical laws are normally easiest to derive in Cartesian coordinates, non-Cartesian orthogonal coordinates are often used instead for the solution of various problems, especially boundary value problems, such as those arising in field theories of quantum mechanics, fluid flow, electrodynamics, plasma physics and the diffusion of chemical species or heat.

The chief advantage of non-Cartesian coordinates is that they can be chosen to match the symmetry of the problem. For example, the pressure wave due to an explosion far from the ground (or other barriers) depends on 3D space in Cartesian coordinates, however the pressure predominantly moves away from the center, so that in spherical coordinates the problem becomes very nearly one-dimensional (since the pressure wave dominantly depends only on time and the distance from the center). Another example is (slow) fluid in a straight circular pipe: in Cartesian coordinates, one has to solve a (difficult) two dimensional boundary value problem involving a partial differential equation, but in cylindrical coordinates the problem becomes one-dimensional with an ordinary differential equation instead of a partial differential equation.

The reason to prefer orthogonal coordinates instead of general curvilinear coordinates is simplicity: many complications arise when coordinates are not orthogonal. For example, in orthogonal coordinates many problems may be solved by separation of variables. Separation of variables is a mathematical technique that converts a complex d-dimensional problem into d one-dimensional problems that can be solved in terms of known functions. Many equations can be reduced to Laplace's equation or the Helmholtz equation. Laplace's equation is separable in 13 orthogonal coordinate systems (the 14 listed in the table below with the exception of toroidal), and the Helmholtz equation is separable in 11 orthogonal coordinate systems.[1][2]

Orthogonal coordinates never have off-diagonal terms in their metric tensor. In other words, the infinitesimal squared distance ds2 can always be written as a scaled sum of the squared infinitesimal coordinate displacements

 

where d is the dimension and the scaling functions (or scale factors)

 

equal the square roots of the diagonal components of the metric tensor, or the lengths of the local basis vectors   described below. These scaling functions hi are used to calculate differential operators in the new coordinates, e.g., the gradient, the Laplacian, the divergence and the curl.

A simple method for generating orthogonal coordinates systems in two dimensions is by a conformal mapping of a standard two-dimensional grid of Cartesian coordinates (x, y). A complex number z = x + iy can be formed from the real coordinates x and y, where i represents the imaginary unit. Any holomorphic function w = f(z) with non-zero complex derivative will produce a conformal mapping; if the resulting complex number is written w = u + iv, then the curves of constant u and v intersect at right angles, just as the original lines of constant x and y did.

Orthogonal coordinates in three and higher dimensions can be generated from an orthogonal two-dimensional coordinate system, either by projecting it into a new dimension (cylindrical coordinates) or by rotating the two-dimensional system about one of its symmetry axes. However, there are other orthogonal coordinate systems in three dimensions that cannot be obtained by projecting or rotating a two-dimensional system, such as the ellipsoidal coordinates. More general orthogonal coordinates may be obtained by starting with some necessary coordinate surfaces and considering their orthogonal trajectories.

Basis vectors Edit

Covariant basis Edit

In Cartesian coordinates, the basis vectors are fixed (constant). In the more general setting of curvilinear coordinates, a point in space is specified by the coordinates, and at every such point there is bound a set of basis vectors, which generally are not constant: this is the essence of curvilinear coordinates in general and is a very important concept. What distinguishes orthogonal coordinates is that, though the basis vectors vary, they are always orthogonal with respect to each other. In other words,

 

These basis vectors are by definition the tangent vectors of the curves obtained by varying one coordinate, keeping the others fixed:

 
Visualization of 2D orthogonal coordinates. Curves obtained by holding all but one coordinate constant are shown, along with basis vectors. Note that the basis vectors aren't of equal length: they need not be, they only need to be orthogonal.
 

where r is some point and qi is the coordinate for which the basis vector is extracted. In other words, a curve is obtained by fixing all but one coordinate; the unfixed coordinate is varied as in a parametric curve, and the derivative of the curve with respect to the parameter (the varying coordinate) is the basis vector for that coordinate.

Note that the vectors are not necessarily of equal length. The useful functions known as scale factors of the coordinates are simply the lengths   of the basis vectors   (see table below). The scale factors are sometimes called Lamé coefficients, not to be confused with Lamé parameters (solid mechanics).

The normalized basis vectors are notated with a hat and obtained by dividing by the length:

 

A vector field may be specified by its components with respect to the basis vectors or the normalized basis vectors, and one must be sure which case is meant. Components in the normalized basis are most common in applications for clarity of the quantities (for example, one may want to deal with tangential velocity instead of tangential velocity times a scale factor); in derivations the normalized basis is less common since it is more complicated.

Contravariant basis Edit

The basis vectors shown above are covariant basis vectors (because they "co-vary" with vectors). In the case of orthogonal coordinates, the contravariant basis vectors are easy to find since they will be in the same direction as the covariant vectors but reciprocal length (for this reason, the two sets of basis vectors are said to be reciprocal with respect to each other):

 

this follows from the fact that, by definition,  , using the Kronecker delta. Note that:

 

We now face three different basis sets commonly used to describe vectors in orthogonal coordinates: the covariant basis ei, the contravariant basis ei, and the normalized basis êi. While a vector is an objective quantity, meaning its identity is independent of any coordinate system, the components of a vector depend on what basis the vector is represented in.

To avoid confusion, the components of the vector x with respect to the ei basis are represented as xi, while the components with respect to the ei basis are represented as xi:

 

The position of the indices represent how the components are calculated (upper indices should not be confused with exponentiation). Note that the summation symbols Σ (capital Sigma) and the summation range, indicating summation over all basis vectors (i = 1, 2, ..., d), are often omitted. The components are related simply by:

 

There is no distinguishing widespread notation in use for vector components with respect to the normalized basis; in this article we'll use subscripts for vector components and note that the components are calculated in the normalized basis.

Vector algebra Edit

Vector addition and negation are done component-wise just as in Cartesian coordinates with no complication. Extra considerations may be necessary for other vector operations.

Note however, that all of these operations assume that two vectors in a vector field are bound to the same point (in other words, the tails of vectors coincide). Since basis vectors generally vary in orthogonal coordinates, if two vectors are added whose components are calculated at different points in space, the different basis vectors require consideration.

Dot product Edit

The dot product in Cartesian coordinates (Euclidean space with an orthonormal basis set) is simply the sum of the products of components. In orthogonal coordinates, the dot product of two vectors x and y takes this familiar form when the components of the vectors are calculated in the normalized basis:

 

This is an immediate consequence of the fact that the normalized basis at some point can form a Cartesian coordinate system: the basis set is orthonormal.

For components in the covariant or contravariant bases,

 

This can be readily derived by writing out the vectors in component form, normalizing the basis vectors, and taking the dot product. For example, in 2D:

 

where the fact that the normalized covariant and contravariant bases are equal has been used.

Cross product Edit

The cross product in 3D Cartesian coordinates is:

 

The above formula then remains valid in orthogonal coordinates if the components are calculated in the normalized basis.

To construct the cross product in orthogonal coordinates with covariant or contravariant bases we again must simply normalize the basis vectors, for example:

 

which, written expanded out,

 

Terse notation for the cross product, which simplifies generalization to non-orthogonal coordinates and higher dimensions, is possible with the Levi-Civita tensor, which will have components other than zeros and ones if the scale factors are not all equal to one.

Vector calculus Edit

Differentiation Edit

Looking at an infinitesimal displacement from some point, it's apparent that

 

By definition, the gradient of a function must satisfy (this definition remains true if ƒ is any tensor)

 

It follows then that del operator must be:

 

and this happens to remain true in general curvilinear coordinates. Quantities like the gradient and Laplacian follow through proper application of this operator.

Basis vector formulae Edit

From dr and normalized basis vectors êi, the following can be constructed.[3][4]

Differential element Vectors Scalars
Line element Tangent vector to coordinate curve qi:

 

Infinitesimal length

 

Surface element Normal to coordinate surface qk = constant:

 

Infinitesimal surface

 

Volume element N/A Infinitesimal volume

 

where

 

is the Jacobian determinant, which has the geometric interpretation of the deformation in volume from the infinitesimal cube dxdydz to the infinitesimal curved volume in the orthogonal coordinates.

Integration Edit

Using the line element shown above, the line integral along a path   of a vector F is:

 

An infinitesimal element of area for a surface described by holding one coordinate qk constant is:

 

Similarly, the volume element is:

 

where the large symbol Π (capital Pi) indicates a product the same way that a large Σ indicates summation. Note that the product of all the scale factors is the Jacobian determinant.

As an example, the surface integral of a vector function F over a q1 = constant surface   in 3D is:

 

Note that F1/h1 is the component of F normal to the surface.

Differential operators in three dimensions Edit

Since these operations are common in application, all vector components in this section are presented with respect to the normalised basis:  .

Operator Expression
Gradient of a scalar field  
Divergence of a vector field  
Curl of a vector field  
Laplacian of a scalar field  

The above expressions can be written in a more compact form using the Levi-Civita symbol   and the Jacobian determinant  , assuming summation over repeated indices:

Operator Expression
Gradient of a scalar field  
Divergence of a vector field  
Curl of a vector field (3D only)  
Laplacian of a scalar field  

Also notice the gradient of a scalar field can be expressed in terms of the Jacobian matrix J containing canonical partial derivatives:

 

upon a change of basis:

 

where the rotation and scaling matrices are:

 
 

Table of two-dimensional orthogonal coordinates Edit

System Complex Transform

 

Shape of   and   isolines Comment
Cartesian   line, line
Log-polar   circle, line for   becomes Polar
Parabolic   parabola, parabola
point dipol   circle, circle
Elliptic   ellipse, hyperbola field of a needle, appears Log-polar for large distances
Bipolar   circle, circle appears like point dipol for large distances
  hyperbola, hyperbola field of a inner edge
  elipse, parabola
 
cartesian
 
polar
 
logpolar
 
ellipse parabola
 
parabolic
 
point dipol
 
sqrt(u+iv)
 
elliptic
 
bipolar
 
inverse logpolar
Examples of two-dimensional orthogonal coordinates (https://www.desmos.com/calculator/m5gmtg4n1d).

Table of three-dimensional orthogonal coordinates Edit

Besides the usual cartesian coordinates, several others are tabulated below.[5] Interval notation is used for compactness in the coordinates column, and the entries are grouped by their interval signatures, e.g. COCCCO for spherical coordinates. The entries are not sorted by their interval signatures in alphabetic order. After the grouping of the entries by interval signature, the sort order here is alphabetic by the curvilinear coordinate system name.

Curvillinear coordinates (q1, q2, q3) Transformation from cartesian (x, y, z) Scale factors
Spherical coordinates

 

   
Parabolic coordinates

 

   
Bipolar cylindrical coordinates

 

   
Ellipsoidal coordinates

 

 

where  

 
Paraboloidal coordinates

 

 

where  

 
Cylindrical polar coordinates

 

   
Elliptic cylindrical coordinates

 

   
Oblate spheroidal coordinates

 

   
Prolate spheroidal coordinates

 

   
Bispherical coordinates

 

   
Toroidal coordinates

 

   
Parabolic cylindrical coordinates

 

   
Conical coordinates

 

   


See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Eric W. Weisstein. "Orthogonal Coordinate System". MathWorld. Retrieved 10 July 2008.
  2. ^ Morse and Feshbach 1953, Volume 1, pp. 494–523, 655–666.
  3. ^ Mathematical Handbook of Formulas and Tables (3rd edition), S. Lipschutz, M.R. Spiegel, J. Liu, Schuam's Outline Series, 2009, ISBN 978-0-07-154855-7.
  4. ^ Vector Analysis (2nd Edition), M.R. Spiegel, S. Lipschutz, D. Spellman, Schaum’s Outlines, McGraw Hill (USA), 2009, ISBN 978-0-07-161545-7
  5. ^ Vector Analysis (2nd Edition), M.R. Spiegel, S. Lipschutz, D. Spellman, Schaum’s Outlines, McGraw Hill (USA), 2009, ISBN 978-0-07-161545-7

References Edit

  • Korn GA and Korn TM. (1961) Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers, McGraw-Hill, pp. 164–182.
  • Morse and Feshbach (1953). "Methods of Theoretical Physics, Volume 1". McGraw-Hill. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Margenau H. and Murphy GM. (1956) The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry, 2nd. ed., Van Nostrand, pp. 172–192.
  • Leonid P. Lebedev and Michael J. Cloud (2003) Tensor Analysis, pp. 81 – 88.

orthogonal, coordinates, mathematics, orthogonal, coordinates, defined, coordinates, displaystyle, mathbf, dots, which, coordinate, hypersurfaces, meet, right, angles, note, that, superscripts, indices, exponents, coordinate, surface, particular, coordinate, c. In mathematics orthogonal coordinates are defined as a set of d coordinates q q 1 q 2 q d displaystyle mathbf q q 1 q 2 dots q d in which the coordinate hypersurfaces all meet at right angles note that superscripts are indices not exponents A coordinate surface for a particular coordinate qk is the curve surface or hypersurface on which qk is a constant For example the three dimensional Cartesian coordinates x y z is an orthogonal coordinate system since its coordinate surfaces x constant y constant and z constant are planes that meet at right angles to one another i e are perpendicular Orthogonal coordinates are a special but extremely common case of curvilinear coordinates Contents 1 Motivation 2 Basis vectors 2 1 Covariant basis 2 2 Contravariant basis 3 Vector algebra 3 1 Dot product 3 2 Cross product 4 Vector calculus 4 1 Differentiation 4 2 Basis vector formulae 4 3 Integration 5 Differential operators in three dimensions 6 Table of two dimensional orthogonal coordinates 7 Table of three dimensional orthogonal coordinates 8 See also 9 Notes 10 ReferencesMotivation Edit nbsp A conformal map acting on a rectangular grid Note that the orthogonality of the curved grid is retained While vector operations and physical laws are normally easiest to derive in Cartesian coordinates non Cartesian orthogonal coordinates are often used instead for the solution of various problems especially boundary value problems such as those arising in field theories of quantum mechanics fluid flow electrodynamics plasma physics and the diffusion of chemical species or heat The chief advantage of non Cartesian coordinates is that they can be chosen to match the symmetry of the problem For example the pressure wave due to an explosion far from the ground or other barriers depends on 3D space in Cartesian coordinates however the pressure predominantly moves away from the center so that in spherical coordinates the problem becomes very nearly one dimensional since the pressure wave dominantly depends only on time and the distance from the center Another example is slow fluid in a straight circular pipe in Cartesian coordinates one has to solve a difficult two dimensional boundary value problem involving a partial differential equation but in cylindrical coordinates the problem becomes one dimensional with an ordinary differential equation instead of a partial differential equation The reason to prefer orthogonal coordinates instead of general curvilinear coordinates is simplicity many complications arise when coordinates are not orthogonal For example in orthogonal coordinates many problems may be solved by separation of variables Separation of variables is a mathematical technique that converts a complex d dimensional problem into d one dimensional problems that can be solved in terms of known functions Many equations can be reduced to Laplace s equation or the Helmholtz equation Laplace s equation is separable in 13 orthogonal coordinate systems the 14 listed in the table below with the exception of toroidal and the Helmholtz equation is separable in 11 orthogonal coordinate systems 1 2 Orthogonal coordinates never have off diagonal terms in their metric tensor In other words the infinitesimal squared distance ds2 can always be written as a scaled sum of the squared infinitesimal coordinate displacements d s 2 k 1 d h k d q k 2 displaystyle ds 2 sum k 1 d left h k dq k right 2 nbsp where d is the dimension and the scaling functions or scale factors h k q d e f g k k q e k displaystyle h k mathbf q stackrel mathrm def sqrt g kk mathbf q mathbf e k nbsp equal the square roots of the diagonal components of the metric tensor or the lengths of the local basis vectors e k displaystyle mathbf e k nbsp described below These scaling functions hi are used to calculate differential operators in the new coordinates e g the gradient the Laplacian the divergence and the curl A simple method for generating orthogonal coordinates systems in two dimensions is by a conformal mapping of a standard two dimensional grid of Cartesian coordinates x y A complex number z x iy can be formed from the real coordinates x and y where i represents the imaginary unit Any holomorphic function w f z with non zero complex derivative will produce a conformal mapping if the resulting complex number is written w u iv then the curves of constant u and v intersect at right angles just as the original lines of constant x and y did Orthogonal coordinates in three and higher dimensions can be generated from an orthogonal two dimensional coordinate system either by projecting it into a new dimension cylindrical coordinates or by rotating the two dimensional system about one of its symmetry axes However there are other orthogonal coordinate systems in three dimensions that cannot be obtained by projecting or rotating a two dimensional system such as the ellipsoidal coordinates More general orthogonal coordinates may be obtained by starting with some necessary coordinate surfaces and considering their orthogonal trajectories Basis vectors EditCovariant basis Edit In Cartesian coordinates the basis vectors are fixed constant In the more general setting of curvilinear coordinates a point in space is specified by the coordinates and at every such point there is bound a set of basis vectors which generally are not constant this is the essence of curvilinear coordinates in general and is a very important concept What distinguishes orthogonal coordinates is that though the basis vectors vary they are always orthogonal with respect to each other In other words e i e j 0 if i j displaystyle mathbf e i cdot mathbf e j 0 quad text if quad i neq j nbsp These basis vectors are by definition the tangent vectors of the curves obtained by varying one coordinate keeping the others fixed nbsp Visualization of 2D orthogonal coordinates Curves obtained by holding all but one coordinate constant are shown along with basis vectors Note that the basis vectors aren t of equal length they need not be they only need to be orthogonal e i r q i displaystyle mathbf e i frac partial mathbf r partial q i nbsp where r is some point and qi is the coordinate for which the basis vector is extracted In other words a curve is obtained by fixing all but one coordinate the unfixed coordinate is varied as in a parametric curve and the derivative of the curve with respect to the parameter the varying coordinate is the basis vector for that coordinate Note that the vectors are not necessarily of equal length The useful functions known as scale factors of the coordinates are simply the lengths h i displaystyle h i nbsp of the basis vectors e i displaystyle hat mathbf e i nbsp see table below The scale factors are sometimes called Lame coefficients not to be confused with Lame parameters solid mechanics The normalized basis vectors are notated with a hat and obtained by dividing by the length e i e i h i e i e i displaystyle hat mathbf e i frac mathbf e i h i frac mathbf e i left mathbf e i right nbsp A vector field may be specified by its components with respect to the basis vectors or the normalized basis vectors and one must be sure which case is meant Components in the normalized basis are most common in applications for clarity of the quantities for example one may want to deal with tangential velocity instead of tangential velocity times a scale factor in derivations the normalized basis is less common since it is more complicated Contravariant basis Edit The basis vectors shown above are covariant basis vectors because they co vary with vectors In the case of orthogonal coordinates the contravariant basis vectors are easy to find since they will be in the same direction as the covariant vectors but reciprocal length for this reason the two sets of basis vectors are said to be reciprocal with respect to each other e i e i h i e i h i 2 displaystyle mathbf e i frac hat mathbf e i h i frac mathbf e i h i 2 nbsp this follows from the fact that by definition e i e j d i j displaystyle mathbf e i cdot mathbf e j delta i j nbsp using the Kronecker delta Note that e i e i h i h i e i e i displaystyle hat mathbf e i frac mathbf e i h i h i mathbf e i hat mathbf e i nbsp We now face three different basis sets commonly used to describe vectors in orthogonal coordinates the covariant basis ei the contravariant basis ei and the normalized basis ei While a vector is an objective quantity meaning its identity is independent of any coordinate system the components of a vector depend on what basis the vector is represented in To avoid confusion the components of the vector x with respect to the ei basis are represented as xi while the components with respect to the ei basis are represented as xi x i x i e i i x i e i displaystyle mathbf x sum i x i mathbf e i sum i x i mathbf e i nbsp The position of the indices represent how the components are calculated upper indices should not be confused with exponentiation Note that the summation symbols S capital Sigma and the summation range indicating summation over all basis vectors i 1 2 d are often omitted The components are related simply by h i 2 x i x i displaystyle h i 2 x i x i nbsp There is no distinguishing widespread notation in use for vector components with respect to the normalized basis in this article we ll use subscripts for vector components and note that the components are calculated in the normalized basis Vector algebra EditVector addition and negation are done component wise just as in Cartesian coordinates with no complication Extra considerations may be necessary for other vector operations Note however that all of these operations assume that two vectors in a vector field are bound to the same point in other words the tails of vectors coincide Since basis vectors generally vary in orthogonal coordinates if two vectors are added whose components are calculated at different points in space the different basis vectors require consideration Dot product Edit The dot product in Cartesian coordinates Euclidean space with an orthonormal basis set is simply the sum of the products of components In orthogonal coordinates the dot product of two vectors x and y takes this familiar form when the components of the vectors are calculated in the normalized basis x y i x i e i j y j e j i x i y i displaystyle mathbf x cdot mathbf y sum i x i hat mathbf e i cdot sum j y j hat mathbf e j sum i x i y i nbsp This is an immediate consequence of the fact that the normalized basis at some point can form a Cartesian coordinate system the basis set is orthonormal For components in the covariant or contravariant bases x y i h i 2 x i y i i x i y i h i 2 i x i y i i x i y i displaystyle mathbf x cdot mathbf y sum i h i 2 x i y i sum i frac x i y i h i 2 sum i x i y i sum i x i y i nbsp This can be readily derived by writing out the vectors in component form normalizing the basis vectors and taking the dot product For example in 2D x y x 1 e 1 x 2 e 2 y 1 e 1 y 2 e 2 x 1 h 1 e 1 x 2 h 2 e 2 y 1 e 1 h 1 y 2 e 2 h 2 x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 displaystyle begin aligned mathbf x cdot mathbf y amp left x 1 mathbf e 1 x 2 mathbf e 2 right cdot left y 1 mathbf e 1 y 2 mathbf e 2 right 10pt amp left x 1 h 1 hat mathbf e 1 x 2 h 2 hat mathbf e 2 right cdot left y 1 frac hat mathbf e 1 h 1 y 2 frac hat mathbf e 2 h 2 right x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 end aligned nbsp where the fact that the normalized covariant and contravariant bases are equal has been used Cross product Edit The cross product in 3D Cartesian coordinates is x y x 2 y 3 x 3 y 2 e 1 x 3 y 1 x 1 y 3 e 2 x 1 y 2 x 2 y 1 e 3 displaystyle mathbf x times mathbf y x 2 y 3 x 3 y 2 hat mathbf e 1 x 3 y 1 x 1 y 3 hat mathbf e 2 x 1 y 2 x 2 y 1 hat mathbf e 3 nbsp The above formula then remains valid in orthogonal coordinates if the components are calculated in the normalized basis To construct the cross product in orthogonal coordinates with covariant or contravariant bases we again must simply normalize the basis vectors for example x y i x i e i j y j e j i x i h i e i j y j h j e j displaystyle mathbf x times mathbf y sum i x i mathbf e i times sum j y j mathbf e j sum i x i h i hat mathbf e i times sum j y j h j hat mathbf e j nbsp which written expanded out x y x 2 y 3 x 3 y 2 h 2 h 3 h 1 e 1 x 3 y 1 x 1 y 3 h 1 h 3 h 2 e 2 x 1 y 2 x 2 y 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 e 3 displaystyle mathbf x times mathbf y left x 2 y 3 x 3 y 2 right frac h 2 h 3 h 1 mathbf e 1 left x 3 y 1 x 1 y 3 right frac h 1 h 3 h 2 mathbf e 2 left x 1 y 2 x 2 y 1 right frac h 1 h 2 h 3 mathbf e 3 nbsp Terse notation for the cross product which simplifies generalization to non orthogonal coordinates and higher dimensions is possible with the Levi Civita tensor which will have components other than zeros and ones if the scale factors are not all equal to one Vector calculus EditDifferentiation Edit Looking at an infinitesimal displacement from some point it s apparent that d r i r q i d q i i e i d q i displaystyle d mathbf r sum i frac partial mathbf r partial q i dq i sum i mathbf e i dq i nbsp By definition the gradient of a function must satisfy this definition remains true if ƒ is any tensor d f f d r d f f i e i d q i displaystyle df nabla f cdot d mathbf r quad Rightarrow quad df nabla f cdot sum i mathbf e i dq i nbsp It follows then that del operator must be i e i q i displaystyle nabla sum i mathbf e i frac partial partial q i nbsp and this happens to remain true in general curvilinear coordinates Quantities like the gradient and Laplacian follow through proper application of this operator Basis vector formulae Edit From dr and normalized basis vectors ei the following can be constructed 3 4 Differential element Vectors ScalarsLine element Tangent vector to coordinate curve qi d ℓ h i d q i e i r q i d q i displaystyle d boldsymbol ell h i dq i hat mathbf e i frac partial mathbf r partial q i dq i nbsp Infinitesimal length d ℓ d r d r h 1 d q 1 2 h 2 d q 2 2 h 3 d q 3 2 displaystyle d ell sqrt d mathbf r cdot d mathbf r sqrt h 1 dq 1 2 h 2 dq 2 2 h 3 dq 3 2 nbsp Surface element Normal to coordinate surface qk constant d S h i d q i e i h j d q j e j d q i d q j r q i r q j h i h j d q i d q j e k displaystyle begin aligned d mathbf S amp h i dq i hat mathbf e i times h j dq j hat mathbf e j amp dq i dq j left frac partial mathbf r partial q i times frac partial mathbf r partial q j right amp h i h j dq i dq j hat mathbf e k end aligned nbsp Infinitesimal surface d S k h i h j d q i d q j displaystyle dS k h i h j dq i dq j nbsp Volume element N A Infinitesimal volume d V h 1 d q 1 e 1 h 2 d q 2 e 2 h 3 d q 3 e 3 e 1 e 2 e 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 d q 1 d q 2 d q 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 d q 1 d q 2 d q 3 J d q 1 d q 2 d q 3 displaystyle begin aligned dV amp h 1 dq 1 hat mathbf e 1 cdot h 2 dq 2 hat mathbf e 2 times h 3 dq 3 hat mathbf e 3 amp hat mathbf e 1 cdot hat mathbf e 2 times hat mathbf e 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 dq 1 dq 2 dq 3 amp h 1 h 2 h 3 dq 1 dq 2 dq 3 amp J dq 1 dq 2 dq 3 end aligned nbsp where J r q 1 r q 2 r q 3 x y z q 1 q 2 q 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 displaystyle J left frac partial mathbf r partial q 1 cdot left frac partial mathbf r partial q 2 times frac partial mathbf r partial q 3 right right left frac partial x y z partial q 1 q 2 q 3 right h 1 h 2 h 3 nbsp is the Jacobian determinant which has the geometric interpretation of the deformation in volume from the infinitesimal cube dxdydz to the infinitesimal curved volume in the orthogonal coordinates Integration Edit Using the line element shown above the line integral along a path P displaystyle scriptstyle mathcal P nbsp of a vector F is P F d r P i F i e i j e j d q j i P F i d q i displaystyle int mathcal P mathbf F cdot d mathbf r int mathcal P sum i F i mathbf e i cdot sum j mathbf e j dq j sum i int mathcal P F i dq i nbsp An infinitesimal element of area for a surface described by holding one coordinate qk constant is d A k i k d s i i k h i d q i displaystyle dA k prod i neq k ds i prod i neq k h i dq i nbsp Similarly the volume element is d V i d s i i h i d q i displaystyle dV prod i ds i prod i h i dq i nbsp where the large symbol P capital Pi indicates a product the same way that a large S indicates summation Note that the product of all the scale factors is the Jacobian determinant As an example the surface integral of a vector function F over a q1 constant surface S displaystyle scriptstyle mathcal S nbsp in 3D is S F d A S F n d A S F e 1 d A S F 1 h 2 h 3 h 1 d q 2 d q 3 displaystyle int mathcal S mathbf F cdot d mathbf A int mathcal S mathbf F cdot hat mathbf n dA int mathcal S mathbf F cdot hat mathbf e 1 dA int mathcal S F 1 frac h 2 h 3 h 1 dq 2 dq 3 nbsp Note that F1 h1 is the component of F normal to the surface Differential operators in three dimensions EditMain article del Since these operations are common in application all vector components in this section are presented with respect to the normalised basis F i F e i displaystyle F i mathbf F cdot hat mathbf e i nbsp Operator ExpressionGradient of a scalar field ϕ e 1 h 1 ϕ q 1 e 2 h 2 ϕ q 2 e 3 h 3 ϕ q 3 displaystyle nabla phi frac hat mathbf e 1 h 1 frac partial phi partial q 1 frac hat mathbf e 2 h 2 frac partial phi partial q 2 frac hat mathbf e 3 h 3 frac partial phi partial q 3 nbsp Divergence of a vector field F 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 q 1 F 1 h 2 h 3 q 2 F 2 h 3 h 1 q 3 F 3 h 1 h 2 displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf F frac 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 left frac partial partial q 1 left F 1 h 2 h 3 right frac partial partial q 2 left F 2 h 3 h 1 right frac partial partial q 3 left F 3 h 1 h 2 right right nbsp Curl of a vector field F e 1 h 2 h 3 q 2 h 3 F 3 q 3 h 2 F 2 e 2 h 3 h 1 q 3 h 1 F 1 q 1 h 3 F 3 e 3 h 1 h 2 q 1 h 2 F 2 q 2 h 1 F 1 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 h 1 e 1 h 2 e 2 h 3 e 3 q 1 q 2 q 3 h 1 F 1 h 2 F 2 h 3 F 3 displaystyle begin aligned nabla times mathbf F amp frac hat mathbf e 1 h 2 h 3 left frac partial partial q 2 left h 3 F 3 right frac partial partial q 3 left h 2 F 2 right right frac hat mathbf e 2 h 3 h 1 left frac partial partial q 3 left h 1 F 1 right frac partial partial q 1 left h 3 F 3 right right 10pt amp frac hat mathbf e 3 h 1 h 2 left frac partial partial q 1 left h 2 F 2 right frac partial partial q 2 left h 1 F 1 right right frac 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 begin vmatrix h 1 hat mathbf e 1 amp h 2 hat mathbf e 2 amp h 3 hat mathbf e 3 dfrac partial partial q 1 amp dfrac partial partial q 2 amp dfrac partial partial q 3 h 1 F 1 amp h 2 F 2 amp h 3 F 3 end vmatrix end aligned nbsp Laplacian of a scalar field 2 ϕ 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 q 1 h 2 h 3 h 1 ϕ q 1 q 2 h 3 h 1 h 2 ϕ q 2 q 3 h 1 h 2 h 3 ϕ q 3 displaystyle nabla 2 phi frac 1 h 1 h 2 h 3 left frac partial partial q 1 left frac h 2 h 3 h 1 frac partial phi partial q 1 right frac partial partial q 2 left frac h 3 h 1 h 2 frac partial phi partial q 2 right frac partial partial q 3 left frac h 1 h 2 h 3 frac partial phi partial q 3 right right nbsp The above expressions can be written in a more compact form using the Levi Civita symbol ϵ i j k displaystyle epsilon ijk nbsp and the Jacobian determinant J h 1 h 2 h 3 displaystyle J h 1 h 2 h 3 nbsp assuming summation over repeated indices Operator ExpressionGradient of a scalar field ϕ e k h k ϕ q k displaystyle nabla phi frac hat mathbf e k h k frac partial phi partial q k nbsp Divergence of a vector field F 1 J q k J h k F k displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf F frac 1 J frac partial partial q k left frac J h k F k right nbsp Curl of a vector field 3D only F h k e k J ϵ i j k q i h j F j displaystyle nabla times mathbf F frac h k hat mathbf e k J epsilon ijk frac partial partial q i left h j F j right nbsp Laplacian of a scalar field 2 ϕ 1 J q k J h k 2 ϕ q k displaystyle nabla 2 phi frac 1 J frac partial partial q k left frac J h k 2 frac partial phi partial q k right nbsp Also notice the gradient of a scalar field can be expressed in terms of the Jacobian matrix J containing canonical partial derivatives J ϕ q 1 ϕ q 2 ϕ q 3 displaystyle mathbf J left frac partial phi partial q 1 frac partial phi partial q 2 frac partial phi partial q 3 right nbsp upon a change of basis ϕ S R J T displaystyle nabla phi mathbf S mathbf R mathbf J T nbsp where the rotation and scaling matrices are R e 1 e 2 e 3 displaystyle mathbf R mathbf e 1 mathbf e 2 mathbf e 3 nbsp S d i a g h 1 1 h 2 1 h 3 1 displaystyle mathbf S mathrm diag h 1 1 h 2 1 h 3 1 nbsp Table of two dimensional orthogonal coordinates EditSystem Complex Transform x i y f u i v displaystyle x iy f u iv nbsp Shape of u displaystyle u nbsp and v displaystyle v nbsp isolines CommentCartesian u i v displaystyle u iv nbsp line lineLog polar exp u i v displaystyle exp u iv nbsp circle line for u ln r displaystyle u ln r nbsp becomes PolarParabolic 1 2 u i v 2 displaystyle frac 1 2 u iv 2 nbsp parabola parabolapoint dipol u i v 1 displaystyle u iv 1 nbsp circle circleElliptic cosh u i v displaystyle cosh u iv nbsp ellipse hyperbola field of a needle appears Log polar for large distancesBipolar coth u i v displaystyle coth u iv nbsp circle circle appears like point dipol for large distancesu i v displaystyle sqrt u iv nbsp hyperbola hyperbola field of a inner edgeu x 2 2 y 2 y v x 2 displaystyle u x 2 2y 2 y vx 2 nbsp elipse parabola nbsp cartesian nbsp polar nbsp logpolar nbsp ellipse parabola nbsp parabolic nbsp point dipol nbsp sqrt u iv nbsp elliptic nbsp bipolar nbsp inverse logpolarExamples of two dimensional orthogonal coordinates https www desmos com calculator m5gmtg4n1d Table of three dimensional orthogonal coordinates EditBesides the usual cartesian coordinates several others are tabulated below 5 Interval notation is used for compactness in the coordinates column and the entries are grouped by their interval signatures e g COCCCO for spherical coordinates The entries are not sorted by their interval signatures in alphabetic order After the grouping of the entries by interval signature the sort order here is alphabetic by the curvilinear coordinate system name Curvillinear coordinates q1 q2 q3 Transformation from cartesian x y z Scale factorsSpherical coordinates r 8 ϕ 0 0 p 0 2 p displaystyle r theta phi in 0 infty times 0 pi times 0 2 pi nbsp x r sin 8 cos ϕ y r sin 8 sin ϕ z r cos 8 displaystyle begin aligned x amp r sin theta cos phi y amp r sin theta sin phi z amp r cos theta end aligned nbsp h 1 1 h 2 r h 3 r sin 8 displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp 1 h 2 amp r h 3 amp r sin theta end aligned nbsp Parabolic coordinates u v ϕ 0 0 0 2 p displaystyle u v phi in 0 infty times 0 infty times 0 2 pi nbsp x u v cos ϕ y u v sin ϕ z 1 2 u 2 v 2 displaystyle begin aligned x amp uv cos phi y amp uv sin phi z amp frac 1 2 u 2 v 2 end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 u 2 v 2 h 3 u v displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 sqrt u 2 v 2 h 3 amp uv end aligned nbsp Bipolar cylindrical coordinates u v z 0 2 p displaystyle u v z in 0 2 pi times infty infty times infty infty nbsp x a sinh v cosh v cos u y a sin u cosh v cos u z z displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac a sinh v cosh v cos u y amp frac a sin u cosh v cos u z amp z end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 a cosh v cos u h 3 1 displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 frac a cosh v cos u h 3 amp 1 end aligned nbsp Ellipsoidal coordinates l m n 0 c 2 c 2 b 2 b 2 a 2 l lt c 2 lt b 2 lt a 2 c 2 lt m lt b 2 lt a 2 c 2 lt b 2 lt n lt a 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp lambda mu nu in 0 c 2 times c 2 b 2 times b 2 a 2 amp lambda lt c 2 lt b 2 lt a 2 amp c 2 lt mu lt b 2 lt a 2 amp c 2 lt b 2 lt nu lt a 2 end aligned nbsp x 2 a 2 q i y 2 b 2 q i z 2 c 2 q i 1 displaystyle frac x 2 a 2 q i frac y 2 b 2 q i frac z 2 c 2 q i 1 nbsp where q 1 q 2 q 3 l m n displaystyle q 1 q 2 q 3 lambda mu nu nbsp h i 1 2 q j q i q k q i a 2 q i b 2 q i c 2 q i displaystyle h i frac 1 2 sqrt frac q j q i q k q i a 2 q i b 2 q i c 2 q i nbsp Paraboloidal coordinates l m n 0 b 2 b 2 a 2 a 2 b 2 lt a 2 displaystyle begin aligned amp lambda mu nu in 0 b 2 times b 2 a 2 times a 2 infty amp b 2 lt a 2 end aligned nbsp x 2 q i a 2 y 2 q i b 2 2 z q i displaystyle frac x 2 q i a 2 frac y 2 q i b 2 2z q i nbsp where q 1 q 2 q 3 l m n displaystyle q 1 q 2 q 3 lambda mu nu nbsp h i 1 2 q j q i q k q i a 2 q i b 2 q i displaystyle h i frac 1 2 sqrt frac q j q i q k q i a 2 q i b 2 q i nbsp Cylindrical polar coordinates r ϕ z 0 0 2 p displaystyle r phi z in 0 infty times 0 2 pi times infty infty nbsp x r cos ϕ y r sin ϕ z z displaystyle begin aligned x amp r cos phi y amp r sin phi z amp z end aligned nbsp h 1 h 3 1 h 2 r displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 3 1 h 2 amp r end aligned nbsp Elliptic cylindrical coordinates u v z 0 0 2 p displaystyle u v z in 0 infty times 0 2 pi times infty infty nbsp x a cosh u cos v y a sinh u sin v z z displaystyle begin aligned x amp a cosh u cos v y amp a sinh u sin v z amp z end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 a sinh 2 u sin 2 v h 3 1 displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 a sqrt sinh 2 u sin 2 v h 3 amp 1 end aligned nbsp Oblate spheroidal coordinates 3 h ϕ 0 p 2 p 2 0 2 p displaystyle xi eta phi in 0 infty times left frac pi 2 frac pi 2 right times 0 2 pi nbsp x a cosh 3 cos h cos ϕ y a cosh 3 cos h sin ϕ z a sinh 3 sin h displaystyle begin aligned x amp a cosh xi cos eta cos phi y amp a cosh xi cos eta sin phi z amp a sinh xi sin eta end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 a sinh 2 3 sin 2 h h 3 a cosh 3 cos h displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 a sqrt sinh 2 xi sin 2 eta h 3 amp a cosh xi cos eta end aligned nbsp Prolate spheroidal coordinates 3 h ϕ 0 0 p 0 2 p displaystyle xi eta phi in 0 infty times 0 pi times 0 2 pi nbsp x a sinh 3 sin h cos ϕ y a sinh 3 sin h sin ϕ z a cosh 3 cos h displaystyle begin aligned x amp a sinh xi sin eta cos phi y amp a sinh xi sin eta sin phi z amp a cosh xi cos eta end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 a sinh 2 3 sin 2 h h 3 a sinh 3 sin h displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 a sqrt sinh 2 xi sin 2 eta h 3 amp a sinh xi sin eta end aligned nbsp Bispherical coordinates u v ϕ p p 0 0 2 p displaystyle u v phi in pi pi times 0 infty times 0 2 pi nbsp x a sin u cos ϕ cosh v cos u y a sin u sin ϕ cosh v cos u z a sinh v cosh v cos u displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac a sin u cos phi cosh v cos u y amp frac a sin u sin phi cosh v cos u z amp frac a sinh v cosh v cos u end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 a cosh v cos u h 3 a sin u cosh v cos u displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 frac a cosh v cos u h 3 amp frac a sin u cosh v cos u end aligned nbsp Toroidal coordinates u v ϕ p p 0 0 2 p displaystyle u v phi in pi pi times 0 infty times 0 2 pi nbsp x a sinh v cos ϕ cosh v cos u y a sinh v sin ϕ cosh v cos u z a sin u cosh v cos u displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac a sinh v cos phi cosh v cos u y amp frac a sinh v sin phi cosh v cos u z amp frac a sin u cosh v cos u end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 a cosh v cos u h 3 a sinh v cosh v cos u displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 frac a cosh v cos u h 3 amp frac a sinh v cosh v cos u end aligned nbsp Parabolic cylindrical coordinates u v z 0 displaystyle u v z in infty infty times 0 infty times infty infty nbsp x 1 2 u 2 v 2 y u v z z displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac 1 2 u 2 v 2 y amp uv z amp z end aligned nbsp h 1 h 2 u 2 v 2 h 3 1 displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp h 2 sqrt u 2 v 2 h 3 amp 1 end aligned nbsp Conical coordinates l m n n 2 lt b 2 lt m 2 lt a 2 l 0 displaystyle begin aligned amp lambda mu nu amp nu 2 lt b 2 lt mu 2 lt a 2 amp lambda in 0 infty end aligned nbsp x l m n a b y l a m 2 a 2 n 2 a 2 a 2 b 2 z l b m 2 b 2 n 2 b 2 b 2 a 2 displaystyle begin aligned x amp frac lambda mu nu ab y amp frac lambda a sqrt frac mu 2 a 2 nu 2 a 2 a 2 b 2 z amp frac lambda b sqrt frac mu 2 b 2 nu 2 b 2 b 2 a 2 end aligned nbsp h 1 1 h 2 2 l 2 m 2 n 2 m 2 a 2 b 2 m 2 h 3 2 l 2 m 2 n 2 n 2 a 2 n 2 b 2 displaystyle begin aligned h 1 amp 1 h 2 2 amp frac lambda 2 mu 2 nu 2 mu 2 a 2 b 2 mu 2 h 3 2 amp frac lambda 2 mu 2 nu 2 nu 2 a 2 nu 2 b 2 end aligned nbsp See also EditCurvilinear coordinates Geodetic coordinates Tensor Vector field Skew coordinatesNotes Edit Eric W Weisstein Orthogonal Coordinate System MathWorld Retrieved 10 July 2008 Morse and Feshbach 1953 Volume 1 pp 494 523 655 666 Mathematical Handbook of Formulas and Tables 3rd edition S Lipschutz M R Spiegel J Liu Schuam s Outline Series 2009 ISBN 978 0 07 154855 7 Vector Analysis 2nd Edition M R Spiegel S Lipschutz D Spellman Schaum s Outlines McGraw Hill USA 2009 ISBN 978 0 07 161545 7 Vector Analysis 2nd Edition M R Spiegel S Lipschutz D Spellman Schaum s Outlines McGraw Hill USA 2009 ISBN 978 0 07 161545 7References EditKorn GA and Korn TM 1961 Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers McGraw Hill pp 164 182 Morse and Feshbach 1953 Methods of Theoretical Physics Volume 1 McGraw Hill a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Margenau H and Murphy GM 1956 The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry 2nd ed Van Nostrand pp 172 192 Leonid P Lebedev and Michael J Cloud 2003 Tensor Analysis pp 81 88 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orthogonal coordinates amp oldid 1180257002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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