Caltech Vector Calculus 7
Caltech Vector Calculus 7
,
,...,
=
.
(7.1)
x1 x2
xn
It is often convenient to define formally the differential operator in vector
form as:
=
,
,...,
.
(7.2)
x1 x2
xn
Then we may view the gradient of , as the notation suggests, as the
result of multiplying the vector by the scalar field . Note that the order
is not x j .
of multiplication matters, i.e., x
j
Let us now review a couple of facts about the gradient. For any j n,
= constant.
(7.3)
(7.4)
7.2
Divergence
n
X
fj
.
x
j
j=1
(7.5)
,...,
) (f1 , . . . , fn ).
x1
xn
(7.6)
n
X
aii .
i=1
(7.7)
(7.8)
(7.9)
X 2
=(
,...,
)(
,...,
)=
.
x1
xn
x1
xn
x2j
j=1
Then we have
2
(7.10)
2 = ( ).
(7.11)
= ex cos y,
2
y 2
= ex cos y. So, 2 = 0.
p
(ii) D = R2 {0}; (x, y) = log( x2 + y 2 ) = log(r).
(x2 +y 2 )2x(2x)
y
2
x
Then
=
,
=
,
=
=
2
2
2
2
2
x
x +y
y
x +y
x
(x2 +y 2 )2
and
(x2 +y 2 )2y(2y)
(x2 +y 2 )2
(x2 y 2 )
.
(x2 +y 2 )2
(x2 y 2 )
,
(x2 +y 2 )2
and
2
y 2
So, = 0.
These last two examples are special cases of the fact, which we mention
without proof, that for any function f : D C which is differentiable in the
complex sense, the real and imaginary part, <(f ) and =(f ), are harmonic
functions. Here f is differentiable in the complex sense if its total derivative
Df at a point z D, a priori a R-linear map from C to itself, is in fact given
by multiplication with a complex number, which we then call f 0 (z). More
concretely,
this means that the matrix of Df in the basis 1, i is of the form
a b
for some real numbers a, b. We then have f 0 (z) = a + bi. There is
b a
a large supply of such functions since any f given (locally) by a convergent
power series in z is complex differentiable.
In (i) we can take f (z) = ez = ex+iy = ex cos(y) + iex sin(y) and in
(ii) we can take f (z) = log(z) = log(rei ) = log(r) + i but we must be
careful about the domain. To have a well defined argument for all z D
we must make a cut in the plane and can only define f on, for example,
D = {z = x + iy| y = 0 x > 0} or D0 = {z = x + iy| y = 0 x < 0}. But
the union of D and D0 is C {0} as in (ii) .
(iii) D = Rn {0}; (x1 , x2 , ..., xn ) = (x21 + x22 + + x2n )/2 = r for some
fixed R.
= r1 xri = r2 xi , and
Then x
i
2
x2i
= ( 2)r4 xi xi + r2 1.
P
Hence 2 = ni=1 (( 2)r4 x2i + r2 ) = ( 2 + n)r2 .
So is harmonic for = 0 or = 2 n ( = 1 for n = 3).
7.3
Cross product in R3
The three-dimensional space is very special in that it admits a vector product, often called the cross product. Let i,j,k denote the standard basis of
R3 . Then, for all pairs of vectors v = xi + yj + zk and v 0 = x0 i + y 0 j + z 0 k,
the cross product is defined by
v v 0 = det
i j k
x y z
x0 y 0 z 0
ux uy uz
det x y z =ux (yz 0 y 0 z) uy (xz 0 x0 z) + uz (xy 0 x0 y)
x0 y 0 z 0
=||v v 0 || (u2x + u2y + u2z ) = ||v v 0 ||.
4
More generally, the same argument shows that the (signed) volume of the
parallelepiped spanned by any three vectors u, v, v 0 is u (v v 0 ).
7.4
.
(7.13)
curl(f ) = f = det x
y z
P
Q R
(h) = det
=
2h
2h
yz zy
i+
x y z
h h h
x y z
2h
2h
zx xz
j+
2h
2h
xy yx
k.
,
+
,
x y z
y
z
x
z x
y
=
2R
2Q
xy xz
Again, since f is C 2 ,
Done.
2
2R
2P
Q
2P
+
+
+
.
yx yz
zx zy
2R
xy
2R
,
yx
f = det
=
z
x
j.
(x2 +y 2 )
Show
x
y
z
y
x
0
(x2 +y 2 ) (x2 +y 2 )
y
x
y
i+
j+
k
z x2 + y 2
x x2 + y 2
y x2 + y 2
(x2 + y 2 ) + 2x2 (x2 + y 2 ) 2y 2
=
k = 0.
(x2 + y 2 )2
(x2 + y 2 )2
x
2
x + y2
1
m
2
2
2 m2
= m (3 m).
3r
m(x
+
y
+
z
)r
2m
r
r
This is non-zero as m 6= 3. So f is not a curl.
=
7.5
Recall that Greens theorem for a plane region with boundary a piecewise
C 1 Jordan curve C says that, given any C 1 vector field g = (P, Q) on an open
set D containing , we have:
I
ZZ
Q P
dx dy =
P dx + Q dy.
(7.14)
x
y
C
k, because P
f = det x
=
= Q
= 0. Thus we
y z
y
x
z
z
P
get:
( f ) k =
Q P
.
y
x
(7.15)
7.6
Here we just reformulate the remark after Ch. 6, Cor. 1 (which we didnt
completely prove but just made plausible) using the curl.
7
y
i
x2 +y 2
x
j.
x2 +y 2
Again, define f (x, y, z) to be g(x, y) for all (x, y, z) in R3 such that (x, y)
D. Since g is evidently C 1 , f will be C 1 as well. By the Proposition above, it
will suffice to check if f is irrotational, i.e., f = 0, on D R. This was
already shown in Example (i) of section 4 of this chapter. So g is conservative.