fbpx
Wikipedia

Poisson's equation

Poisson's equation is an elliptic partial differential equation of broad utility in theoretical physics. For example, the solution to Poisson's equation is the potential field caused by a given electric charge or mass density distribution; with the potential field known, one can then calculate electrostatic or gravitational (force) field. It is a generalization of Laplace's equation, which is also frequently seen in physics. The equation is named after French mathematician and physicist Siméon Denis Poisson.[1][2]

Siméon Denis Poisson

Statement of the equation edit

Poisson's equation is

 
where   is the Laplace operator, and   and   are real or complex-valued functions on a manifold. Usually,   is given, and   is sought. When the manifold is Euclidean space, the Laplace operator is often denoted as 2, and so Poisson's equation is frequently written as
 

In three-dimensional Cartesian coordinates, it takes the form

 

When   identically, we obtain Laplace's equation.

Poisson's equation may be solved using a Green's function:

 
where the integral is over all of space. A general exposition of the Green's function for Poisson's equation is given in the article on the screened Poisson equation. There are various methods for numerical solution, such as the relaxation method, an iterative algorithm.

Newtonian gravity edit

In the case of a gravitational field g due to an attracting massive object of density ρ, Gauss's law for gravity in differential form can be used to obtain the corresponding Poisson equation for gravity:

 

Since the gravitational field is conservative (and irrotational), it can be expressed in terms of a scalar potential ϕ:

 

Substituting this into Gauss's law,

 
yields Poisson's equation for gravity:
 

If the mass density is zero, Poisson's equation reduces to Laplace's equation. The corresponding Green's function can be used to calculate the potential at distance r from a central point mass m (i.e., the fundamental solution). In three dimensions the potential is

 
which is equivalent to Newton's law of universal gravitation.

Electrostatics edit

One of the cornerstones of electrostatics is setting up and solving problems described by the Poisson equation. Solving the Poisson equation amounts to finding the electric potential φ for a given charge distribution  .

The mathematical details behind Poisson's equation in electrostatics are as follows (SI units are used rather than Gaussian units, which are also frequently used in electromagnetism).

Starting with Gauss's law for electricity (also one of Maxwell's equations) in differential form, one has

 
where   is the divergence operator, D is the electric displacement field, and ρf is the free-charge density (describing charges brought from outside).

Assuming the medium is linear, isotropic, and homogeneous (see polarization density), we have the constitutive equation

 
where ε is the permittivity of the medium, and E is the electric field.

Substituting this into Gauss's law and assuming that ε is spatially constant in the region of interest yields

 
In electrostatics, we assume that there is no magnetic field (the argument that follows also holds in the presence of a constant magnetic field). Then, we have that
 
where ∇× is the curl operator. This equation means that we can write the electric field as the gradient of a scalar function φ (called the electric potential), since the curl of any gradient is zero. Thus we can write
 
where the minus sign is introduced so that φ is identified as the electric potential energy per unit charge.

The derivation of Poisson's equation under these circumstances is straightforward. Substituting the potential gradient for the electric field,

 
directly produces Poisson's equation for electrostatics, which is
 

Solving Poisson's equation for the potential requires knowing the charge density distribution. If the charge density is zero, then Laplace's equation results. If the charge density follows a Boltzmann distribution, then the Poisson–Boltzmann equation results. The Poisson–Boltzmann equation plays a role in the development of the Debye–Hückel theory of dilute electrolyte solutions.

Using Green's function, the potential at distance r from a central point charge Q (i.e., the fundamental solution) is

 
which is Coulomb's law of electrostatics. (For historic reasons, and unlike gravity's model above, the   factor appears here and not in Gauss's law.)

The above discussion assumes that the magnetic field is not varying in time. The same Poisson equation arises even if it does vary in time, as long as the Coulomb gauge is used. In this more general context, computing φ is no longer sufficient to calculate E, since E also depends on the magnetic vector potential A, which must be independently computed. See Maxwell's equation in potential formulation for more on φ and A in Maxwell's equations and how Poisson's equation is obtained in this case.

Potential of a Gaussian charge density edit

If there is a static spherically symmetric Gaussian charge density

 
where Q is the total charge, then the solution φ(r) of Poisson's equation
 
is given by
 
where erf(x) is the error function.

This solution can be checked explicitly by evaluating 2φ.

Note that for r much greater than σ, the erf function approaches unity, and the potential φ(r) approaches the point-charge potential,

 
as one would expect. Furthermore, the error function approaches 1 extremely quickly as its argument increases; in practice, for r > 3σ the relative error is smaller than one part in a thousand.

Surface reconstruction edit

Surface reconstruction is an inverse problem. The goal is to digitally reconstruct a smooth surface based on a large number of points pi (a point cloud) where each point also carries an estimate of the local surface normal ni.[3] Poisson's equation can be utilized to solve this problem with a technique called Poisson surface reconstruction.[4]

The goal of this technique is to reconstruct an implicit function f whose value is zero at the points pi and whose gradient at the points pi equals the normal vectors ni. The set of (pi, ni) is thus modeled as a continuous vector field V. The implicit function f is found by integrating the vector field V. Since not every vector field is the gradient of a function, the problem may or may not have a solution: the necessary and sufficient condition for a smooth vector field V to be the gradient of a function f is that the curl of V must be identically zero. In case this condition is difficult to impose, it is still possible to perform a least-squares fit to minimize the difference between V and the gradient of f.

In order to effectively apply Poisson's equation to the problem of surface reconstruction, it is necessary to find a good discretization of the vector field V. The basic approach is to bound the data with a finite-difference grid. For a function valued at the nodes of such a grid, its gradient can be represented as valued on staggered grids, i.e. on grids whose nodes lie in between the nodes of the original grid. It is convenient to define three staggered grids, each shifted in one and only one direction corresponding to the components of the normal data. On each staggered grid we perform trilinear interpolation on the set of points. The interpolation weights are then used to distribute the magnitude of the associated component of ni onto the nodes of the particular staggered grid cell containing pi. Kazhdan and coauthors give a more accurate method of discretization using an adaptive finite-difference grid, i.e. the cells of the grid are smaller (the grid is more finely divided) where there are more data points.[4] They suggest implementing this technique with an adaptive octree.

Fluid dynamics edit

For the incompressible Navier–Stokes equations, given by

 

The equation for the pressure field   is an example of a nonlinear Poisson equation:

 
Notice that the above trace is not sign-definite.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jackson, Julia A.; Mehl, James P.; Neuendorf, Klaus K. E., eds. (2005), Glossary of Geology, American Geological Institute, Springer, p. 503, ISBN 9780922152766
  2. ^ Poisson (1823). "Mémoire sur la théorie du magnétisme en mouvement" [Memoir on the theory of magnetism in motion]. Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de l'Institut de France (in French). 6: 441–570. From p. 463: "Donc, d'après ce qui précède, nous aurons enfin:
     
    selon que le point M sera situé en dehors, à la surface ou en dedans du volume que l'on considère." (Thus, according to what preceded, we will finally have:
     
    depending on whether the point M is located outside, on the surface of, or inside the volume that one is considering.) V is defined (p. 462) as
     
    where, in the case of electrostatics, the integral is performed over the volume of the charged body, the coordinates of points that are inside or on the volume of the charged body are denoted by  ,   is a given function of   and in electrostatics,   would be a measure of charge density, and   is defined as the length of a radius extending from the point M to a point that lies inside or on the charged body. The coordinates of the point M are denoted by   and   denotes the value of   (the charge density) at M.
  3. ^ Calakli, Fatih; Taubin, Gabriel (2011). "Smooth Signed Distance Surface Reconstruction" (PDF). Pacific Graphics. 30 (7).
  4. ^ a b Kazhdan, Michael; Bolitho, Matthew; Hoppe, Hugues (2006). "Poisson surface reconstruction". Proceedings of the fourth Eurographics symposium on Geometry processing (SGP '06). Eurographics Association, Aire-la-Ville, Switzerland. pp. 61–70. ISBN 3-905673-36-3.

Further reading edit

  • Evans, Lawrence C. (1998). Partial Differential Equations. Providence (RI): American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-0772-2.
  • Mathews, Jon; Walker, Robert L. (1970). Mathematical Methods of Physics (2nd ed.). New York: W. A. Benjamin. ISBN 0-8053-7002-1.
  • Polyanin, Andrei D. (2002). Handbook of Linear Partial Differential Equations for Engineers and Scientists. Boca Raton (FL): Chapman & Hall/CRC Press. ISBN 1-58488-299-9.

External links edit

poisson, equation, elliptic, partial, differential, equation, broad, utility, theoretical, physics, example, solution, potential, field, caused, given, electric, charge, mass, density, distribution, with, potential, field, known, then, calculate, electrostatic. Poisson s equation is an elliptic partial differential equation of broad utility in theoretical physics For example the solution to Poisson s equation is the potential field caused by a given electric charge or mass density distribution with the potential field known one can then calculate electrostatic or gravitational force field It is a generalization of Laplace s equation which is also frequently seen in physics The equation is named after French mathematician and physicist Simeon Denis Poisson 1 2 Simeon Denis Poisson Contents 1 Statement of the equation 2 Newtonian gravity 3 Electrostatics 3 1 Potential of a Gaussian charge density 4 Surface reconstruction 5 Fluid dynamics 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksStatement of the equation editPoisson s equation isD f f displaystyle Delta varphi f nbsp where D displaystyle Delta nbsp is the Laplace operator and f displaystyle f nbsp and f displaystyle varphi nbsp are real or complex valued functions on a manifold Usually f displaystyle f nbsp is given and f displaystyle varphi nbsp is sought When the manifold is Euclidean space the Laplace operator is often denoted as 2 and so Poisson s equation is frequently written as 2 f f displaystyle nabla 2 varphi f nbsp In three dimensional Cartesian coordinates it takes the form 2 x 2 2 y 2 2 z 2 f x y z f x y z displaystyle left frac partial 2 partial x 2 frac partial 2 partial y 2 frac partial 2 partial z 2 right varphi x y z f x y z nbsp When f 0 displaystyle f 0 nbsp identically we obtain Laplace s equation Poisson s equation may be solved using a Green s function f r f r 4 p r r d 3 r displaystyle varphi mathbf r iiint frac f mathbf r 4 pi mathbf r mathbf r mathrm d 3 r nbsp where the integral is over all of space A general exposition of the Green s function for Poisson s equation is given in the article on the screened Poisson equation There are various methods for numerical solution such as the relaxation method an iterative algorithm Newtonian gravity editMain articles Gravitational field and Gauss s law for gravity In the case of a gravitational field g due to an attracting massive object of density r Gauss s law for gravity in differential form can be used to obtain the corresponding Poisson equation for gravity g 4 p G r displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf g 4 pi G rho nbsp Since the gravitational field is conservative and irrotational it can be expressed in terms of a scalar potential ϕ g ϕ displaystyle mathbf g nabla phi nbsp Substituting this into Gauss s law ϕ 4 p G r displaystyle nabla cdot nabla phi 4 pi G rho nbsp yields Poisson s equation for gravity 2 ϕ 4 p G r displaystyle nabla 2 phi 4 pi G rho nbsp If the mass density is zero Poisson s equation reduces to Laplace s equation The corresponding Green s function can be used to calculate the potential at distance r from a central point mass m i e the fundamental solution In three dimensions the potential isϕ r G m r displaystyle phi r frac Gm r nbsp which is equivalent to Newton s law of universal gravitation Electrostatics editMain article Electrostatics This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message One of the cornerstones of electrostatics is setting up and solving problems described by the Poisson equation Solving the Poisson equation amounts to finding the electric potential f for a given charge distribution r f displaystyle rho f nbsp The mathematical details behind Poisson s equation in electrostatics are as follows SI units are used rather than Gaussian units which are also frequently used in electromagnetism Starting with Gauss s law for electricity also one of Maxwell s equations in differential form one has D r f displaystyle mathbf nabla cdot mathbf D rho f nbsp where displaystyle mathbf nabla cdot nbsp is the divergence operator D is the electric displacement field and rf is the free charge density describing charges brought from outside Assuming the medium is linear isotropic and homogeneous see polarization density we have the constitutive equationD e E displaystyle mathbf D varepsilon mathbf E nbsp where e is the permittivity of the medium and E is the electric field Substituting this into Gauss s law and assuming that e is spatially constant in the region of interest yields E r f e displaystyle mathbf nabla cdot mathbf E frac rho f varepsilon nbsp In electrostatics we assume that there is no magnetic field the argument that follows also holds in the presence of a constant magnetic field Then we have that E 0 displaystyle nabla times mathbf E 0 nbsp where is the curl operator This equation means that we can write the electric field as the gradient of a scalar function f called the electric potential since the curl of any gradient is zero Thus we can write E f displaystyle mathbf E nabla varphi nbsp where the minus sign is introduced so that f is identified as the electric potential energy per unit charge The derivation of Poisson s equation under these circumstances is straightforward Substituting the potential gradient for the electric field E f 2 f r f e displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf E nabla cdot nabla varphi nabla 2 varphi frac rho f varepsilon nbsp directly produces Poisson s equation for electrostatics which is 2 f r f e displaystyle nabla 2 varphi frac rho f varepsilon nbsp Solving Poisson s equation for the potential requires knowing the charge density distribution If the charge density is zero then Laplace s equation results If the charge density follows a Boltzmann distribution then the Poisson Boltzmann equation results The Poisson Boltzmann equation plays a role in the development of the Debye Huckel theory of dilute electrolyte solutions Using Green s function the potential at distance r from a central point charge Q i e the fundamental solution isf r Q 4 p e r displaystyle varphi r frac Q 4 pi varepsilon r nbsp which is Coulomb s law of electrostatics For historic reasons and unlike gravity s model above the 4 p displaystyle 4 pi nbsp factor appears here and not in Gauss s law The above discussion assumes that the magnetic field is not varying in time The same Poisson equation arises even if it does vary in time as long as the Coulomb gauge is used In this more general context computing f is no longer sufficient to calculate E since E also depends on the magnetic vector potential A which must be independently computed See Maxwell s equation in potential formulation for more on f and A in Maxwell s equations and how Poisson s equation is obtained in this case Potential of a Gaussian charge density edit If there is a static spherically symmetric Gaussian charge densityr f r Q s 3 2 p 3 e r 2 2 s 2 displaystyle rho f r frac Q sigma 3 sqrt 2 pi 3 e r 2 2 sigma 2 nbsp where Q is the total charge then the solution f r of Poisson s equation 2 f r f e displaystyle nabla 2 varphi frac rho f varepsilon nbsp is given by f r 1 4 p e Q r erf r 2 s displaystyle varphi r frac 1 4 pi varepsilon frac Q r operatorname erf left frac r sqrt 2 sigma right nbsp where erf x is the error function This solution can be checked explicitly by evaluating 2f Note that for r much greater than s the erf function approaches unity and the potential f r approaches the point charge potential f 1 4 p e Q r displaystyle varphi approx frac 1 4 pi varepsilon frac Q r nbsp as one would expect Furthermore the error function approaches 1 extremely quickly as its argument increases in practice for r gt 3s the relative error is smaller than one part in a thousand Surface reconstruction editSurface reconstruction is an inverse problem The goal is to digitally reconstruct a smooth surface based on a large number of points pi a point cloud where each point also carries an estimate of the local surface normal ni 3 Poisson s equation can be utilized to solve this problem with a technique called Poisson surface reconstruction 4 The goal of this technique is to reconstruct an implicit function f whose value is zero at the points pi and whose gradient at the points pi equals the normal vectors ni The set of pi ni is thus modeled as a continuous vector field V The implicit function f is found by integrating the vector field V Since not every vector field is the gradient of a function the problem may or may not have a solution the necessary and sufficient condition for a smooth vector field V to be the gradient of a function f is that the curl of V must be identically zero In case this condition is difficult to impose it is still possible to perform a least squares fit to minimize the difference between V and the gradient of f In order to effectively apply Poisson s equation to the problem of surface reconstruction it is necessary to find a good discretization of the vector field V The basic approach is to bound the data with a finite difference grid For a function valued at the nodes of such a grid its gradient can be represented as valued on staggered grids i e on grids whose nodes lie in between the nodes of the original grid It is convenient to define three staggered grids each shifted in one and only one direction corresponding to the components of the normal data On each staggered grid we perform trilinear interpolation on the set of points The interpolation weights are then used to distribute the magnitude of the associated component of ni onto the nodes of the particular staggered grid cell containing pi Kazhdan and coauthors give a more accurate method of discretization using an adaptive finite difference grid i e the cells of the grid are smaller the grid is more finely divided where there are more data points 4 They suggest implementing this technique with an adaptive octree Fluid dynamics editFor the incompressible Navier Stokes equations given by v t v v 1 r p n D v g v 0 displaystyle begin aligned frac partial mathbf v partial t mathbf v cdot nabla mathbf v amp frac 1 rho nabla p nu Delta mathbf v mathbf g nabla cdot mathbf v amp 0 end aligned nbsp The equation for the pressure field p displaystyle p nbsp is an example of a nonlinear Poisson equation D p r v v r Tr v v displaystyle begin aligned Delta p amp rho nabla cdot mathbf v cdot nabla mathbf v amp rho operatorname Tr big nabla mathbf v nabla mathbf v big end aligned nbsp Notice that the above trace is not sign definite See also edit nbsp Mathematics portal nbsp Physics portal Discrete Poisson equation Poisson Boltzmann equation Helmholtz equation Uniqueness theorem for Poisson s equation Weak formulation Harmonic function Heat equation Potential theoryReferences edit Jackson Julia A Mehl James P Neuendorf Klaus K E eds 2005 Glossary of Geology American Geological Institute Springer p 503 ISBN 9780922152766 Poisson 1823 Memoire sur la theorie du magnetisme en mouvement Memoir on the theory of magnetism in motion Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences de l Institut de France in French 6 441 570 From p 463 Donc d apres ce qui precede nous aurons enfin 2 V x 2 2 V y 2 2 V z 2 0 2 k p 4 k p displaystyle frac partial 2 V partial x 2 frac partial 2 V partial y 2 frac partial 2 V partial z 2 0 2k pi 4k pi nbsp selon que le point M sera situe en dehors a la surface ou en dedans du volume que l on considere Thus according to what preceded we will finally have 2 V x 2 2 V y 2 2 V z 2 0 2 k p 4 k p displaystyle frac partial 2 V partial x 2 frac partial 2 V partial y 2 frac partial 2 V partial z 2 0 2k pi 4k pi nbsp depending on whether the point M is located outside on the surface of or inside the volume that one is considering V is defined p 462 as V k r d x d y d z displaystyle V iiint frac k rho dx dy dz nbsp where in the case of electrostatics the integral is performed over the volume of the charged body the coordinates of points that are inside or on the volume of the charged body are denoted by x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp k displaystyle k nbsp is a given function of x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp and in electrostatics k displaystyle k nbsp would be a measure of charge density and r displaystyle rho nbsp is defined as the length of a radius extending from the point M to a point that lies inside or on the charged body The coordinates of the point M are denoted by x y z displaystyle x y z nbsp and k displaystyle k nbsp denotes the value of k displaystyle k nbsp the charge density at M Calakli Fatih Taubin Gabriel 2011 Smooth Signed Distance Surface Reconstruction PDF Pacific Graphics 30 7 a b Kazhdan Michael Bolitho Matthew Hoppe Hugues 2006 Poisson surface reconstruction Proceedings of the fourth Eurographics symposium on Geometry processing SGP 06 Eurographics Association Aire la Ville Switzerland pp 61 70 ISBN 3 905673 36 3 Further reading editEvans Lawrence C 1998 Partial Differential Equations Providence RI American Mathematical Society ISBN 0 8218 0772 2 Mathews Jon Walker Robert L 1970 Mathematical Methods of Physics 2nd ed New York W A Benjamin ISBN 0 8053 7002 1 Polyanin Andrei D 2002 Handbook of Linear Partial Differential Equations for Engineers and Scientists Boca Raton FL Chapman amp Hall CRC Press ISBN 1 58488 299 9 External links edit Poisson equation Encyclopedia of Mathematics EMS Press 2001 1994 Poisson Equation at EqWorld The World of Mathematical Equations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poisson 27s equation amp oldid 1214748818, 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.