Prolate spheroidal coordinates

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 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.

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).

Definition

Prolate spheroidal coordinates μ and ν for a=1. The lines of equal values of μ and ν are shown on the x-z 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 (\mu, \nu, \phi) is


x = a \ \sinh \mu \ \sin \nu \ \cos \phi

y = a \ \sinh \mu \ \sin \nu \ \sin \phi

z = a \ \cosh \mu \ \cos \nu

where \mu is a nonnegative real number and \nu \in [0, \pi]. The azimuthal angle \phi belongs to the interval [0, 2\pi].

The trigonometric identity


\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 \mu form prolate spheroids, since they are ellipses rotated about the axis joining their foci. Similarly, the hyperbolic trigonometric identity


\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 \nu form hyperboloids of revolution.

Scale factors

The scale factors for the elliptic coordinates (\mu, \nu) are equal


h_{\mu} = h_{\nu} = a\sqrt{\sinh^{2}\mu + \sin^{2}\nu}

whereas the azimuthal scale factor equals


h_{\phi} = a \sinh\mu \ \sin\nu

Consequently, an infinitesimal volume element equals


dV = a^{3} \sinh\mu \ \sin\nu \ 
\left( \sinh^{2}\mu + \sin^{2}\nu \right) d\mu d\nu d\phi

and the Laplacian can be written


\nabla^{2} \Phi = 
\frac{1}{a^{2} \left( \sinh^{2}\mu + \sin^{2}\nu \right)} 
\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] + 
\frac{1}{a^{2} \sinh^{2}\mu \sin^{2}\nu}
\frac{\partial^{2} \Phi}{\partial \phi^{2}}

Other differential operators such as \nabla \cdot \mathbf{F} and \nabla \times \mathbf{F} can be expressed in the coordinates (\mu, \nu, \phi) 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 (\sigma, \tau, \phi) are sometimes used, where \sigma = \cosh \mu and \tau = \cos \nu. Hence, the curves of constant \sigma are prolate spheroids, whereas the curves of constant \tau are hyperboloids of revolution. The coordinate \tau belongs to the interval [-1, 1], whereas the \sigma coordinate must be greater than or equal to one.

The coordinates \sigma and \tau have a simple relation to the distances to the foci F_{1} and F_{2}. For any point in the plane, the sum d_{1}+d_{2} of its distances to the foci equals 2a\sigma, whereas their difference d_{1}-d_{2} equals 2a\tau. Thus, the distance to F_{1} is a(\sigma+\tau), whereas the distance to F_{2} is a(\sigma-\tau). (Recall that F_{1} and F_{2} are located at z=-a and z=+a, respectively.) This gives the following expressions for \sigma, \tau, and \phi:


\sigma = \frac{1}{2a}\left(\sqrt{x^2+y^2+(z+a)^2}+\sqrt{x^2+y^2+(z-a)^2}\right)

\tau = \frac{1}{2a}\left(\sqrt{x^2+y^2+(z+a)^2}-\sqrt{x^2+y^2+(z-a)^2}\right)

\phi = \arctan\left(\frac{y}{x}\right)

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


x  = a \sqrt{\left( \sigma^{2} - 1 \right) \left(1 - \tau^{2} \right)} \cos \phi

y  = a \sqrt{\left( \sigma^{2} - 1 \right) \left(1 - \tau^{2} \right)} \sin \phi

z = a\ \sigma\ \tau

Alternative scale factors

The scale factors for the alternative elliptic coordinates (\sigma, \tau, \phi) are


h_{\sigma} = a\sqrt{\frac{\sigma^{2} - \tau^{2}}{\sigma^{2} - 1}}

h_{\tau} = a\sqrt{\frac{\sigma^{2} - \tau^{2}}{1 - \tau^{2}}}

while the azimuthal scale factor is now


h_{\phi} = a \sqrt{\left( \sigma^{2} - 1 \right) \left( 1 - \tau^{2} \right)}

Hence, the infinitesimal volume element becomes


dV = a^{3} \left( \sigma^{2} - \tau^{2} \right) d\sigma d\tau d\phi

and the Laplacian equals


\nabla^{2} \Phi = 
\frac{1}{a^{2} \left( \sigma^{2} - \tau^{2} \right)}
\left\{
\frac{\partial}{\partial \sigma} \left[ 
\left( \sigma^{2} - 1 \right) \frac{\partial \Phi}{\partial \sigma}
\right] + 
\frac{\partial}{\partial \tau} \left[ 
\left( 1 - \tau^{2} \right) \frac{\partial \Phi}{\partial \tau}
\right]
\right\}
+ \frac{1}{a^{2} \left( \sigma^{2} - 1 \right) \left( 1 - \tau^{2} \right)}
\frac{\partial^{2} \Phi}{\partial \phi^{2}}

Other differential operators such as \nabla \cdot \mathbf{F} and \nabla \times \mathbf{F} can be expressed in the coordinates (\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

    Bibliography

    No angles convention

    Angle convention

    Unusual convention

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, August 12, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.