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The Laplacian Operator in Spherical Polar Coordinates

This document discusses the derivation of the Laplacian operator in spherical coordinates. It begins by defining the spherical coordinate system and relations. It then derives the necessary partial derivatives of the coordinate relations. These are used to express the del operator and its components in spherical coordinates. Taking the second derivatives leads to the full Laplacian operator in spherical coordinates, which is given in equation 19 as the classic form of this operator.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
611 views3 pages

The Laplacian Operator in Spherical Polar Coordinates

This document discusses the derivation of the Laplacian operator in spherical coordinates. It begins by defining the spherical coordinate system and relations. It then derives the necessary partial derivatives of the coordinate relations. These are used to express the del operator and its components in spherical coordinates. Taking the second derivatives leads to the full Laplacian operator in spherical coordinates, which is given in equation 19 as the classic form of this operator.

Uploaded by

TristanPil
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Appendix V: The Laplacian Operator in Spherical Coordinates

Spherical coordinates were introduced in Section 6.4. They were defined in Fig. 6-5 and by Eq. (6-54), namely, X = r sin 0 cos cp, y = r sin 0 sin (p and z = r cos 0. (3) (1) (2)

Although transformations to various curvilinear coordinates can be carried out relatively easily with the use of the vector relations introduced in Section 5.15, it is often of interest to make the substitutions directly. Furthermore, it is a very good exercise in the manipulation of partial derivatives. The relations given in Eq. (1) lead directly to the inverse expressions r^=jc^-^y^-^z\ sin 0 = and tan (f = -.
X

(4) (5)

/ ^ ^ r

(6)

The necessary derivatives can be evaluated from the above relations. For example, from Eq. (4) - ^ = i(jc2 + y2 + zY^^\2x) ox ^ Similarly, Eq. (5) leads to dO dx xcos^O 7? tan 0 = -= r sin 0 cos cp. (7)

cos 0 cos (p r

364

MATHEMATICS FOR CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS

and, Eq. (6) to d(p_ ^ sincp dx r sin 0 Note that in the derivation of Eqs. (8) and (9) the relation (d/dg) tan g = sec^g has been employed, where g can be identified with either 0 or cp. The analogous derivatives can be easily derived by the same method. They are: dr 9y = sin 0 sin (p, cos 0 sin cp r cos ip r sin 0' cos 0, sin 0 r r (10) (11) (12) (13) (14)

de
dy dip dy dr

Vz=
do

al dZ
and

(15) The expressions for the various vector operators in spherical coordinates can be derived with the use of the chain rule. Thus, for example.
d

dx

~ \dx) a7 " \dx) 'do " \dx) a^ ^ ^


= sinOcos(p d COS 0 cos (p d 1 dr r dO sin (p d , r sin 0 dcp (16)

with analogous relations for the two other operators. With the aid of these expressions the nabla, V, in spherical coordinates can be derived from Eq. (5-46). To obtain the Laplacian in spherical coordinates it is necessary to take the appropriate second derivatives. Again, as an example, the derivative of Eq. (16) can be written as

V. THE LAPLACIAN OPERATOR IN SPHERICAL COORDINATES

365

^ cos 0 cos (D d^ a I I = - = sin 0 cos (plsinO cos cp + dx r drdO cos 0 cos (p d dO cos 0 cos (p sin cp d rsinOdrdcp d^ sin 0 cos w cos 0 cos (p a^ r a^ sin (f d + r^ sin 0 dip a h cos 0 cos cp sin (p a^

+
-f-

sin 0 cos (p d dO

r sin 0 dcpdO

cos 0 sin (p a + rsin^O d(p a sin 6 sin (p dr sin cp a r sin 0 dcp^

a2 sin (p sin 0 cos cp r sin 0 drd(p cos 0 sin cp a cos 0 cos (p a 1 r dcpdO dO

cos cp a r sin 0 dcp \

(17)

The corresponding operators in y and z are derived in the same way. The sum of these three operators yields the Laplacian as ^2 a^ dx^ a^ ar2 or W' = 1 a / a + -z IsinO drj r2 sin OdO\ 80 a^ dy^ 2d rdr a^ dz^ 1 a^ r^ 80^ cote a r^ dO 1 r^ sin^ 0 dcp^ (18)

3r V

h-.

32 1 ^sin^edcp^

(19)

Equation (19) is the classic form of this operator in spherical coordinates as given in Eq. (6-55).

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