Laplace's equation

Laplace's equation
In mathematics, a partial differential equation whose solutions (harmonic functions) are useful in investigating physical problems in three dimensions involving gravitational, electrical, and magnetic fields, and certain types of fluid motion.

Named for Pierre-Simon Laplace, the equation states that the sum of the second partial derivatives (the Laplace operator, or Laplacian) of an unknown function is zero. It can apply to functions of two or three variables, and can be written in terms of a differential operator as ΔF = 0, where Δ is the Laplace operator.

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      second-order partial differential equation widely useful in physics because its solutions R (known as harmonic functions (harmonic function)) occur in problems of electrical, magnetic, and gravitational potentials, of steady-state temperatures, and of hydrodynamics. The equation was discovered by the French mathematician and astronomer Pierre-Simon Laplace (Laplace, Pierre-Simon, marquis de) (1749–1827).

      Laplace's equation states that the sum of the second-order partial derivatives (derivative) of R, the unknown function, with respect to the Cartesian coordinates, equals zero:

      The sum on the left often is represented by the expression ∇2R, in which the symbol ∇2 is called the Laplacian, or the Laplace operator.

      Many physical systems are more conveniently described by the use of spherical or cylindrical coordinate systems. Laplace's equation can be recast in these coordinates; for example, in cylindrical coordinates, Laplace's equation is

 

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Universalium. 2010.

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