Reshma
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Can someone explain me the Dirac Delta function for the function:
\vec A = \frac{\hat r}{r^2}
\vec A = \frac{\hat r}{r^2}
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Reshma said:Can someone explain me the Dirac Delta function for the function:
\vec A = \frac{\hat r}{r^2}
Reshma said:Thanks for the link, Vivek. But it did not completely solve my problem. The proofs given in most texts are too mathematical. I need a more physical interpretation of the problem.
himanshu121 said:I believe You want to interpret its curl or div in terms of Dirac Delta Function
\vec{\nabla} X \vec A
maverick280857 said:Yes they are mathematical because of the very definition of DDF. Strictly, it is not a function but it is considered a function. If you want good physical interpretations of its applications, get a copy of Classical Electrodynamics by Griffiths and read the first chapter (I think its called mathematical preliminaries but I'm not very sure).
Hope that helps...
cheers
vivek
dextercioby said:You want the proof that the \nabla \cdot \frac{\vec{r}}{r^{3}} is proportional (it's a "-1" the coefficient of proportionaliry,IIRC) to delta-Dirac...?
That's a pretty delicate matter.It's not really for physicists...Any book on PDE-s should have it,when discussing Laplace & Poisson equations.
Daniel.