翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Helmeted water toad
・ Helmeted woodpecker
・ Helmetia
・ Helmets for Peace
・ Helmetshrike
・ Helmetta, New Jersey
・ Helmhaus Hotel
・ Helmholtz (disambiguation)
・ Helmholtz (lunar crater)
・ Helmholtz (Martian crater)
・ Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
・ Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research
・ Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences
・ Helmholtz coil
・ Helmholtz decomposition
Helmholtz equation
・ Helmholtz flow
・ Helmholtz free energy
・ Helmholtz Graduate School Environmental Health
・ Helmholtz Institute Jena
・ Helmholtz machine
・ Helmholtz pitch notation
・ Helmholtz reciprocity
・ Helmholtz resonance
・ Helmholtz theorem
・ Helmholtz theorem (classical mechanics)
・ Helmholtz Zentrum München
・ Helmholtz's theorems
・ Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin
・ Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Helmholtz equation : ウィキペディア英語版
Helmholtz equation

In mathematics, the Helmholtz equation, named for Hermann von Helmholtz, is the partial differential equation
:\nabla^2 A + k^2 A = 0
where ∇2 is the Laplacian, ''k'' is the wavenumber, and ''A'' is the amplitude.
==Motivation and uses==

The Helmholtz equation often arises in the study of physical problems involving partial differential equations (PDEs) in both space and time. The Helmholtz equation, which represents a time-independent form of the wave equation, results from applying the technique of separation of variables to reduce the complexity of the analysis.
For example, consider the wave equation
:\left(\nabla^2-\frac\frac\right)u(\mathbf,t)=0.
Separation of variables begins by assuming that the wave function ''u''(r, ''t'') is in fact separable:
:u(\mathbf,t)=A (\mathbf) T(t).
Substituting this form into the wave equation, and then simplifying, we obtain the following equation:
: = .
Notice the expression on the left-hand side depends only on r, whereas the right-hand expression depends only on ''t''. As a result, this equation is valid in the general case if and only if both sides of the equation are equal to a constant value. From this observation, we obtain two equations, one for ''A''(r), the other for ''T''(''t''):
: = -k^2
and
: = -k^2
where we have chosen, without loss of generality, the expression −''k''2 for the value of the constant. (It is equally valid to use any constant ''k'' as the separation constant; −''k''2 is chosen only for convenience in the resulting solutions.)
Rearranging the first equation, we obtain the Helmholtz equation:
:\nabla^2 A + k^2 A = ( \nabla^2 + k^2) A = 0.
Likewise, after making the substitution
: \omega \stackrel kc
the second equation becomes
:\frac^2} + \omega^2T = \left( + \omega^2 \right) T = 0,
where ''k'' is the wave vector and ''ω'' is the angular frequency.
We now have Helmholtz's equation for the spatial variable r and a second-order ordinary differential equation in time. The solution in time will be a linear combination of sine and cosine functions, with angular frequency of ω, while the form of the solution in space will depend on the boundary conditions. Alternatively, integral transforms, such as the Laplace or Fourier transform, are often used to transform a hyperbolic PDE into a form of the Helmholtz equation.
Because of its relationship to the wave equation, the Helmholtz equation arises in problems in such areas of physics as the study of electromagnetic radiation, seismology, and acoustics.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Helmholtz equation」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.