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Prolate spheroidal coordinates

Prolate spheroidal coordinates are a three-dimensional orthogonal coordinate system that results from rotating the two-dimensional elliptic coordinate system about the focal axis of the ellipse, i.e., the symmetry axis on which the foci are located. Rotation about the other axis produces oblate spheroidal coordinates. Prolate spheroidal coordinates can also be considered as a limiting case of ellipsoidal coordinates in which the two smallest principal axes are equal in length.

The three coordinate surfaces of prolate spheroidal coordinates. The red prolate spheroid (stretched sphere) corresponds to μ = 1, and the blue two-sheet hyperboloid corresponds to ν = 45°. The yellow half-plane corresponds to φ = −60°, which is measured relative to the x-axis (highlighted in green). The black sphere represents the intersection point of the three surfaces, which has Cartesian coordinates of roughly (0.831, −1.439, 2.182).

Prolate spheroidal coordinates can be used to solve various partial differential equations in which the boundary conditions match its symmetry and shape, such as solving for a field produced by two centers, which are taken as the foci on the z-axis. One example is solving for the wavefunction of an electron moving in the electromagnetic field of two positively charged nuclei, as in the hydrogen molecular ion, H2+. Another example is solving for the electric field generated by two small electrode tips. Other limiting cases include areas generated by a line segment (μ = 0) or a line with a missing segment (ν=0). The electronic structure of general diatomic molecules with many electrons can also be solved to excellent precision in the prolate spheroidal coordinate system.[1]

Definition

 
Prolate spheroidal coordinates μ and ν for a = 1. The lines of equal values of μ and ν are shown on the xz-plane, i.e. for φ = 0. The surfaces of constant μ and ν are obtained by rotation about the z-axis, so that the diagram is valid for any plane containing the z-axis: i.e. for any φ.

The most common definition of prolate spheroidal coordinates   is

 
 
 

where   is a nonnegative real number and  . The azimuthal angle   belongs to the interval  .

The trigonometric identity

 

shows that surfaces of constant   form prolate spheroids, since they are ellipses rotated about the axis joining their foci. Similarly, the hyperbolic trigonometric identity

 

shows that surfaces of constant   form hyperboloids of revolution.

The distances from the foci located at   are

 

Scale factors

The scale factors for the elliptic coordinates   are equal

 

whereas the azimuthal scale factor is

 

resulting in a metric of

 

Consequently, an infinitesimal volume element equals

 

and the Laplacian can be written

 

Other differential operators such as   and   can be expressed in the coordinates   by substituting the scale factors into the general formulae found in orthogonal coordinates.

Alternative definition

 
In principle, a definition of prolate spheroidal coordinates could be degenerate. In other words, a single set of coordinates might correspond to two points in Cartesian coordinates; this is illustrated here with two black spheres, one on each sheet of the hyperboloid and located at (x, y, ±z). However, neither of the definitions presented here are degenerate.

An alternative and geometrically intuitive set of prolate spheroidal coordinates   are sometimes used, where   and  . Hence, the curves of constant   are prolate spheroids, whereas the curves of constant   are hyperboloids of revolution. The coordinate   belongs to the interval [−1, 1], whereas the   coordinate must be greater than or equal to one.

The coordinates   and   have a simple relation to the distances to the foci   and  . For any point in the plane, the sum   of its distances to the foci equals  , whereas their difference   equals  . Thus, the distance to   is  , whereas the distance to   is  . (Recall that   and   are located at   and  , respectively.) This gives the following expressions for  ,  , and  :

 
 
 

Unlike the analogous oblate spheroidal coordinates, the prolate spheroid coordinates (σ, τ, φ) are not degenerate; in other words, there is a unique, reversible correspondence between them and the Cartesian coordinates

 
 
 

Alternative scale factors

The scale factors for the alternative elliptic coordinates   are

 
 

while the azimuthal scale factor is now

 

Hence, the infinitesimal volume element becomes

 

and the Laplacian equals

 

Other differential operators such as   and   can be expressed in the coordinates   by substituting the scale factors into the general formulae found in orthogonal coordinates.

As is the case with spherical coordinates, Laplace's equation may be solved by the method of separation of variables to yield solutions in the form of prolate spheroidal harmonics, which are convenient to use when boundary conditions are defined on a surface with a constant prolate spheroidal coordinate (See Smythe, 1968).

References

  1. ^ Lehtola, Susi (21 May 2019). "A review on non-relativistic, fully numerical electronic structure calculations on atoms and diatomic molecules". Int. J. Quantum Chem. 119: e25968. doi:10.1002/qua.25968.

Bibliography

No angles convention

  • Morse PM, Feshbach H (1953). Methods of Theoretical Physics, Part I. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 661. Uses ξ1 = a cosh μ, ξ2 = sin ν, and ξ3 = cos φ.
  • Zwillinger D (1992). Handbook of Integration. Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett. p. 114. ISBN 0-86720-293-9. Same as Morse & Feshbach (1953), substituting uk for ξk.
  • Smythe, WR (1968). Static and Dynamic Electricity (3rd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
  • Sauer R, Szabó I (1967). Mathematische Hilfsmittel des Ingenieurs. New York: Springer Verlag. p. 97. LCCN 67025285. Uses coordinates ξ = cosh μ, η = sin ν, and φ.

Angle convention

  • Korn GA, Korn TM (1961). Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 177. LCCN 59014456. Korn and Korn use the (μ, ν, φ) coordinates, but also introduce the degenerate (σ, τ, φ) coordinates.
  • Margenau H, Murphy GM (1956). The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry. New York: D. van Nostrand. pp. 180–182. LCCN 55010911. Similar to Korn and Korn (1961), but uses colatitude θ = 90° - ν instead of latitude ν.
  • Moon PH, Spencer DE (1988). "Prolate Spheroidal Coordinates (η, θ, ψ)". Field Theory Handbook, Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations, and Their Solutions (corrected 2nd ed., 3rd print ed.). New York: Springer Verlag. pp. 28–30 (Table 1.06). ISBN 0-387-02732-7. Moon and Spencer use the colatitude convention θ = 90° − ν, and rename φ as ψ.

Unusual convention

  • Landau LD, Lifshitz EM, Pitaevskii LP (1984). Electrodynamics of Continuous Media (Volume 8 of the Course of Theoretical Physics) (2nd ed.). New York: Pergamon Press. pp. 19–29. ISBN 978-0-7506-2634-7. Treats the prolate spheroidal coordinates as a limiting case of the general ellipsoidal coordinates. Uses (ξ, η, ζ) coordinates that have the units of distance squared.

External links

  • MathWorld description of prolate spheroidal coordinates

prolate, spheroidal, coordinates, three, dimensional, orthogonal, coordinate, system, that, results, from, rotating, dimensional, elliptic, coordinate, system, about, focal, axis, ellipse, symmetry, axis, which, foci, located, rotation, about, other, axis, pro. Prolate spheroidal coordinates are a three dimensional orthogonal coordinate system that results from rotating the two dimensional elliptic coordinate system about the focal axis of the ellipse i e the symmetry axis on which the foci are located Rotation about the other axis produces oblate spheroidal coordinates Prolate spheroidal coordinates can also be considered as a limiting case of ellipsoidal coordinates in which the two smallest principal axes are equal in length The three coordinate surfaces of prolate spheroidal coordinates The red prolate spheroid stretched sphere corresponds to m 1 and the blue two sheet hyperboloid corresponds to n 45 The yellow half plane corresponds to f 60 which is measured relative to the x axis highlighted in green The black sphere represents the intersection point of the three surfaces which has Cartesian coordinates of roughly 0 831 1 439 2 182 Prolate spheroidal coordinates can be used to solve various partial differential equations in which the boundary conditions match its symmetry and shape such as solving for a field produced by two centers which are taken as the foci on the z axis One example is solving for the wavefunction of an electron moving in the electromagnetic field of two positively charged nuclei as in the hydrogen molecular ion H2 Another example is solving for the electric field generated by two small electrode tips Other limiting cases include areas generated by a line segment m 0 or a line with a missing segment n 0 The electronic structure of general diatomic molecules with many electrons can also be solved to excellent precision in the prolate spheroidal coordinate system 1 Contents 1 Definition 2 Scale factors 3 Alternative definition 4 Alternative scale factors 5 References 6 Bibliography 6 1 No angles convention 6 2 Angle convention 6 3 Unusual convention 7 External linksDefinition Edit Prolate spheroidal coordinates m and n for a 1 The lines of equal values of m and n are shown on the xz plane i e for f 0 The surfaces of constant m and n are obtained by rotation about the z axis so that the diagram is valid for any plane containing the z axis i e for any f The most common definition of prolate spheroidal coordinates m n f displaystyle mu nu varphi is x a sinh m sin n cos f displaystyle x a sinh mu sin nu cos varphi y a sinh m sin n sin f displaystyle y a sinh mu sin nu sin varphi z a cosh m cos n displaystyle z a cosh mu cos nu where m displaystyle mu is a nonnegative real number and n 0 p displaystyle nu in 0 pi The azimuthal angle f displaystyle varphi belongs to the interval 0 2 p displaystyle 0 2 pi The trigonometric identity z 2 a 2 cosh 2 m x 2 y 2 a 2 sinh 2 m cos 2 n sin 2 n 1 displaystyle frac z 2 a 2 cosh 2 mu frac x 2 y 2 a 2 sinh 2 mu cos 2 nu sin 2 nu 1 shows that surfaces of constant m displaystyle mu form prolate spheroids since they are ellipses rotated about the axis joining their foci Similarly the hyperbolic trigonometric identity z 2 a 2 cos 2 n x 2 y 2 a 2 sin 2 n cosh 2 m sinh 2 m 1 displaystyle frac z 2 a 2 cos 2 nu frac x 2 y 2 a 2 sin 2 nu cosh 2 mu sinh 2 mu 1 shows that surfaces of constant n displaystyle nu form hyperboloids of revolution The distances from the foci located at x y z 0 0 a displaystyle x y z 0 0 pm a are r x 2 y 2 z a 2 a cosh m cos n displaystyle r pm sqrt x 2 y 2 z mp a 2 a cosh mu mp cos nu Scale factors EditThe scale factors for the elliptic coordinates m n displaystyle mu nu are equal h m h n a sinh 2 m sin 2 n displaystyle h mu h nu a sqrt sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu whereas the azimuthal scale factor is h f a sinh m sin n displaystyle h varphi a sinh mu sin nu resulting in a metric of d s 2 h m 2 d m 2 h n 2 d n 2 h f 2 d f 2 a 2 sinh 2 m sin 2 n d m 2 sinh 2 m sin 2 n d n 2 sinh 2 m sin 2 n d f 2 displaystyle begin aligned ds 2 amp h mu 2 d mu 2 h nu 2 d nu 2 h varphi 2 d varphi 2 amp a 2 left sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu d mu 2 sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu d nu 2 sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu d varphi 2 right end aligned Consequently an infinitesimal volume element equals d V a 3 sinh m sin n sinh 2 m sin 2 n d m d n d f displaystyle dV a 3 sinh mu sin nu sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu d mu d nu d varphi and the Laplacian can be written 2 F 1 a 2 sinh 2 m sin 2 n 2 F m 2 2 F n 2 coth m F m cot n F n 1 a 2 sinh 2 m sin 2 n 2 F f 2 displaystyle begin aligned nabla 2 Phi amp frac 1 a 2 sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu left frac partial 2 Phi partial mu 2 frac partial 2 Phi partial nu 2 coth mu frac partial Phi partial mu cot nu frac partial Phi partial nu right 6pt amp frac 1 a 2 sinh 2 mu sin 2 nu frac partial 2 Phi partial varphi 2 end aligned Other differential operators such as F displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf F and F displaystyle nabla times mathbf F can be expressed in the coordinates m n f displaystyle mu nu varphi by substituting the scale factors into the general formulae found in orthogonal coordinates Alternative definition Edit In principle a definition of prolate spheroidal coordinates could be degenerate In other words a single set of coordinates might correspond to two points in Cartesian coordinates this is illustrated here with two black spheres one on each sheet of the hyperboloid and located at x y z However neither of the definitions presented here are degenerate An alternative and geometrically intuitive set of prolate spheroidal coordinates s t ϕ displaystyle sigma tau phi are sometimes used where s cosh m displaystyle sigma cosh mu and t cos n displaystyle tau cos nu Hence the curves of constant s displaystyle sigma are prolate spheroids whereas the curves of constant t displaystyle tau are hyperboloids of revolution The coordinate t displaystyle tau belongs to the interval 1 1 whereas the s displaystyle sigma coordinate must be greater than or equal to one The coordinates s displaystyle sigma and t displaystyle tau have a simple relation to the distances to the foci F 1 displaystyle F 1 and F 2 displaystyle F 2 For any point in the plane the sum d 1 d 2 displaystyle d 1 d 2 of its distances to the foci equals 2 a s displaystyle 2a sigma whereas their difference d 1 d 2 displaystyle d 1 d 2 equals 2 a t displaystyle 2a tau Thus the distance to F 1 displaystyle F 1 is a s t displaystyle a sigma tau whereas the distance to F 2 displaystyle F 2 is a s t displaystyle a sigma tau Recall that F 1 displaystyle F 1 and F 2 displaystyle F 2 are located at z a displaystyle z a and z a displaystyle z a respectively This gives the following expressions for s displaystyle sigma t displaystyle tau and f displaystyle varphi s 1 2 a x 2 y 2 z a 2 x 2 y 2 z a 2 displaystyle sigma frac 1 2a left sqrt x 2 y 2 z a 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 z a 2 right t 1 2 a x 2 y 2 z a 2 x 2 y 2 z a 2 displaystyle tau frac 1 2a left sqrt x 2 y 2 z a 2 sqrt x 2 y 2 z a 2 right f arctan y x displaystyle varphi arctan left frac y x right Unlike the analogous oblate spheroidal coordinates the prolate spheroid coordinates s t f are not degenerate in other words there is a unique reversible correspondence between them and the Cartesian coordinates x a s 2 1 1 t 2 cos f displaystyle x a sqrt sigma 2 1 1 tau 2 cos varphi y a s 2 1 1 t 2 sin f displaystyle y a sqrt sigma 2 1 1 tau 2 sin varphi z a s t displaystyle z a sigma tau Alternative scale factors EditThe scale factors for the alternative elliptic coordinates s t f displaystyle sigma tau varphi are h s a s 2 t 2 s 2 1 displaystyle h sigma a sqrt frac sigma 2 tau 2 sigma 2 1 h t a s 2 t 2 1 t 2 displaystyle h tau a sqrt frac sigma 2 tau 2 1 tau 2 while the azimuthal scale factor is now h f a s 2 1 1 t 2 displaystyle h varphi a sqrt left sigma 2 1 right left 1 tau 2 right Hence the infinitesimal volume element becomes d V a 3 s 2 t 2 d s d t d f displaystyle dV a 3 sigma 2 tau 2 d sigma d tau d varphi and the Laplacian equals 2 F 1 a 2 s 2 t 2 s s 2 1 F s t 1 t 2 F t 1 a 2 s 2 1 1 t 2 2 F f 2 displaystyle begin aligned nabla 2 Phi amp frac 1 a 2 sigma 2 tau 2 left frac partial partial sigma left left sigma 2 1 right frac partial Phi partial sigma right frac partial partial tau left 1 tau 2 frac partial Phi partial tau right right amp frac 1 a 2 sigma 2 1 1 tau 2 frac partial 2 Phi partial varphi 2 end aligned Other differential operators such as F displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf F and F displaystyle nabla times mathbf F can be expressed in the coordinates s t displaystyle sigma tau by substituting the scale factors into the general formulae found in orthogonal coordinates As is the case with spherical coordinates Laplace s equation may be solved by the method of separation of variables to yield solutions in the form of prolate spheroidal harmonics which are convenient to use when boundary conditions are defined on a surface with a constant prolate spheroidal coordinate See Smythe 1968 References Edit Lehtola Susi 21 May 2019 A review on non relativistic fully numerical electronic structure calculations on atoms and diatomic molecules Int J Quantum Chem 119 e25968 doi 10 1002 qua 25968 Bibliography EditNo angles convention Edit Morse PM Feshbach H 1953 Methods of Theoretical Physics Part I New York McGraw Hill p 661 Uses 31 a cosh m 32 sin n and 33 cos f Zwillinger D 1992 Handbook of Integration Boston MA Jones and Bartlett p 114 ISBN 0 86720 293 9 Same as Morse amp Feshbach 1953 substituting uk for 3k Smythe WR 1968 Static and Dynamic Electricity 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill Sauer R Szabo I 1967 Mathematische Hilfsmittel des Ingenieurs New York Springer Verlag p 97 LCCN 67025285 Uses coordinates 3 cosh m h sin n and f Angle convention Edit Korn GA Korn TM 1961 Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers New York McGraw Hill p 177 LCCN 59014456 Korn and Korn use the m n f coordinates but also introduce the degenerate s t f coordinates Margenau H Murphy GM 1956 The Mathematics of Physics and Chemistry New York D van Nostrand pp 180 182 LCCN 55010911 Similar to Korn and Korn 1961 but uses colatitude 8 90 n instead of latitude n Moon PH Spencer DE 1988 Prolate Spheroidal Coordinates h 8 ps Field Theory Handbook Including Coordinate Systems Differential Equations and Their Solutions corrected 2nd ed 3rd print ed New York Springer Verlag pp 28 30 Table 1 06 ISBN 0 387 02732 7 Moon and Spencer use the colatitude convention 8 90 n and rename f as ps Unusual convention Edit Landau LD Lifshitz EM Pitaevskii LP 1984 Electrodynamics of Continuous Media Volume 8 of the Course of Theoretical Physics 2nd ed New York Pergamon Press pp 19 29 ISBN 978 0 7506 2634 7 Treats the prolate spheroidal coordinates as a limiting case of the general ellipsoidal coordinates Uses 3 h z coordinates that have the units of distance squared External links EditMathWorld description of prolate spheroidal coordinates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prolate spheroidal coordinates amp oldid 1066306236, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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