Vector field (rotors and nabla operators)

skrat
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Homework Statement


Find ##\alpha ## and ##p## so that ##\nabla \times \vec{A}=0## and ##\nabla \cdot \vec{A}=0##, where in ##\vec{A}=r^{-p}[\vec{n}(\vec{n}\vec{r})-\alpha n^2\vec{r}]## vector ##\vec{n}## is constant.

Homework Equations





The Attempt at a Solution



##\nabla \times \vec{A}=0##

##\nabla \times \vec{A}=\nabla \times [r^{-p}\vec{n}(\vec{n}\vec{r})-r^{-p}\alpha n^2\vec{r}]=##
##=r^{-p}(\vec{r}\vec{n})\nabla \times \vec{n}+\nabla(r^{-p}(\vec{r}\vec{n}))\times \vec{n}-r^{-p}\alpha n^2\nabla \times \vec{r}-\nabla(r^{-p}\alpha n^2)\times \vec{r}=##
##=0+[(\vec{r}\vec{n})\nabla r^{-p}+\nabla(\vec{r}\vec{n})r^{-p}]\times \vec{n}-0-[r^{-p}\alpha n^2\nabla \times \vec{r}+\alpha n^2\nabla r^{-p}\times \vec{r}]=##
##=(\vec{r}\vec{n})(-p)r^{-p-2}\vec{r}\times \vec{n}##

##\nabla \cdot \vec{A}=0##

##\nabla \cdot \vec{A}=\nabla [r^{-p}\vec{n}(\vec{n}\vec{r})-r^{-p}\alpha n^2\vec{r}]=##
##=\nabla (r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r}))\vec{n}-r^{-p}\alpha n^2\nabla \vec{r}-\nabla(r^{-p}\alpha n^2)\vec{r}=##
##=(r^{-p}\vec{n}-pr^{-p-2}(\vec{r}\vec{n})\vec{r})\vec{n}-3\alpha n^2 r^{-p}+p\alpha n^2r^{-p-1}##

I know something is wrong, I just don't know what and where :(
 
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Does this mean that from ##\nabla \times \vec{A}=0## we know that ##p=0## and accordingly from the second equation that ##\alpha =-\frac{1}{3n}## ?
 
skrat said:
##=(r^{-p}\vec{n}-pr^{-p-2}(\vec{r}\vec{n})\vec{r})\vec{n}-3\alpha n^2 r^{-p}+p\alpha n^2r^{-p-1}##

There should be a factor of 3 in the first term and the last term should have ##r^{-p}## instead of ##r^{-p-1}##.

I think you are correct about ##p=0##.
 
hmmm.

First term only:

##\nabla r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r})\vec{n}=##
##=r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r})\nabla\vec{n}+(\nabla r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r}))\vec{n}=##
##=0+[(\vec{n}\vec{r})\nabla r^{-p}+(\nabla(\vec{n}\vec{r}))r^{-p}]\vec{n}=##
##=[-p(\vec{n}\vec{r})r^{-p-1}\frac{\vec{r}}{r}+r^{-p}\vec{n}]\vec{n}=##
##=-pr^{-p-2}(\vec{n}\vec{r})^2+r^{-p}n##

I don't know where would factor 3 come from?
 
skrat said:
hmmm.

First term only:

##\nabla r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r})\vec{n}=##
##=r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r})\nabla\vec{n}+(\nabla r^{-p}(\vec{n}\vec{r}))\vec{n}=##
##=0+[(\vec{n}\vec{r})\nabla r^{-p}+(\nabla(\vec{n}\vec{r}))r^{-p}]\vec{n}=##
##=[-p(\vec{n}\vec{r})r^{-p-1}\frac{\vec{r}}{r}+r^{-p}\vec{n}]\vec{n}=##
##=-pr^{-p-2}(\vec{n}\vec{r})^2+r^{-p}n^2##

I don't know where would factor 3 come from?

I meant that it should be ##3r^{-p}n^2## instead of ##r^{-p}n^2##. How do you get ##r^{-p}n^2##?
 
Well

##\nabla(\vec{r}\vec{n})=\vec{n}##

##\vec{n}r^{-p}## and finally ##\vec{n}^2r^{-p}=n^2r^{-p}##
 
skrat said:
Well

##\nabla(\vec{r}\vec{n})=\vec{n}##

No, this is not correct. How do you conclude this?
 
##\nabla(\vec{n}\vec{r})=\nabla(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)=(\frac{\partial }{\partial x}(xn_x),\frac{\partial }{\partial y}(yn_y),\frac{\partial }{\partial z}(zn_z))=(n_x,n_y,n_z)=\vec{n}##

is it not?
 
skrat said:
##\nabla(\vec{n}\vec{r})=\nabla(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)=(\frac{\partial }{\partial x}(xn_x),\frac{\partial }{\partial y}(yn_y),\frac{\partial }{\partial z}(zn_z))=(n_x,n_y,n_z)=\vec{n}##

is it not?

Weird. I was about to correct you because you seem to consider each term as a vector component, but when I wrote the thing down it resulted in the exact same thing :P

\nabla(\vec{n}.\vec{r})= \nabla(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)=\left( \frac{\partial }{\partial x}(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z),\frac{\partial }{\partial y}(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z),\frac{\partial }{\partial z}(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z) \right)=(n_x,n_y,n_z)=\vec{n}
 
  • #10
diegzumillo said:
Weird. I was about to correct you because you seem to consider each term as a vector component, but when I wrote the thing down it resulted in the exact same thing :P

I was a bit lazy and didn't write terms that disappear after derivation. :)
 
  • #11
skrat said:
##\nabla(\vec{n}\vec{r})=\nabla(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)=(\frac{\partial }{\partial x}(xn_x),\frac{\partial }{\partial y}(yn_y),\frac{\partial }{\partial z}(zn_z))=(n_x,n_y,n_z)=\vec{n}##

is it not?


Hmm...that looks correct although the following identity I found on wiki doesn't seem to agree.

$$\nabla (\vec{f}\cdot \vec{g})=(\vec{f}\cdot \nabla)\vec{g}+(\vec{g}\cdot \nabla)\vec{f}+\vec{f}\times(\nabla \times \vec{g})+\vec{g}\times(\nabla \times \vec{f})$$

In the prsent case, ##\vec{f}=\vec{n}## and ##\vec{g}=\vec{r}##. Three terms in the above identity are zero and ##\nabla\cdot r=3## and this gives the factor of 3. Any idea what's wrong with the above?

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_calculus_identities
 
  • #12
Pranav-Arora said:
Any idea what's wrong with the above?
The first term is the only non-vanishing term. ##\nabla \cdot r \neq r \cdot \nabla##. The first is a scalar (divergence of r) and the latter is a differential operator.
 
  • #13
CAF123 said:
The first term is the only non-vanishing term. ##\nabla \cdot r \neq r \cdot \nabla##. The first is a scalar (divergence of r) and the latter is a differential operator.

Thanks CAF!

I haven't yet seen that in the book I am currently following. How do you calculate ##\vec{r}\cdot \nabla##? (Sorry if this is an idiotic question, I have only a 2-days experience with vector calculus :-p )
 
  • #14
I made this calculation here breaking into components and I got the same result. p=0 and \alpha =1/3. How do you know this is wrong?

edit: excuse my blindness, that's not the result you found.
 
Last edited:
  • #15
diegzumillo said:
I made this calculation here breaking into components and I got the same result. p=0 and \alpha =1/3. How do you know this is wrong?

Mainly because I got ##\alpha =-\frac{1}{3n}## and you haven't.

No other reason actually. I just doubt that I did right.
 
  • #16
Nonononononono!

I have a sign error in my notes. You are right, I also get ##\alpha = \frac 1 3 ##
 
  • #17
This problem has one more question I have no idea how to answer:

How can scalar potential of this vector field with calculated ##p## and ##\alpha ## be written?
 
  • #18
Pranav-Arora said:
Thanks CAF!

I haven't yet seen that in the book I am currently following. How do you calculate ##\vec{r}\cdot \nabla##? (Sorry if this is an idiotic question, I have only a 2-days experience with vector calculus :-p )

$$\vec r \cdot \nabla = (xe_x + ye_y + ze_z) \cdot \left\{e_x\frac{\partial}{\partial x} + e_y\frac{\partial}{\partial y} + e_z\frac{\partial}{\partial z} \right\}$$ Then doing the dot product gives $$x \frac{\partial}{\partial x} + y \frac{\partial}{\partial y} + z \frac{\partial}{\partial z}$$ which vanishes when acted on a constant vector. So I do not mean to say ##\vec r \cdot \nabla## vanishes identically.
 
  • #19
CAF123 said:
$$\vec r \cdot \nabla = (xe_x + ye_y + ze_z) \cdot \left\{e_x\frac{\partial}{\partial x} + e_y\frac{\partial}{\partial y} + e_z\frac{\partial}{\partial z} \right\}$$ Then doing the dot product gives $$x \frac{\partial}{\partial x} + y \frac{\partial}{\partial y} + z \frac{\partial}{\partial z}$$ which vanishes when acted on a constant vector. So I do not mean to say ##\vec r \cdot \nabla## vanishes identically.

Understood, thanks a lot! :smile:
 
  • #20
skrat said:
This problem has one more question I have no idea how to answer:

How can scalar potential of this vector field with calculated ##p## and ##\alpha ## be written?

I assume you mean finding \varphi from the definition
-\nabla \varphi = \vec A

I don't remember any elegant way of solving this besides solving three (or even less) integral equations like -\frac{\partial \varphi}{\partial x} = A_x \Rightarrow \varphi = \int dx A_x
 
  • #21
Just be careful when performing an integration on x, for example, since its integration constant could very well be a function of y and z. Yeah, you'll have to do the other integrations as well.
 
  • #22
Ok, I get it.

##\varphi=\int A_xdx+C(y,z)## now the idea is to find what ##C(y,z)## really is.

Will do that in my next post.
 
Last edited:
  • #23
diegzumillo said:
I don't remember any elegant way of solving this besides solving three (or even less) integral equations like -\frac{\partial \varphi}{\partial x} = A_x \Rightarrow \varphi = \int dx A_x
Given the supposition ##\vec A = \nabla \varphi##, you could find ##\varphi## by doing a line integral over an arbritary path between some reference point and some point in space. Analogous to the definition of potential energy in physics.
 
  • #24
Ok,now second part.

##\vec{A}=[\vec{n}(\vec{r}\vec{n})-\alpha n^2\vec{r}]r^{-p}=[\vec{n}(\vec{r}\vec{n})-\frac{n^2}{3}\vec{r}]## if ##p=0## and ##\alpha = 1/3##.

##[\vec{n}(\vec{r}\vec{n})-\frac{n^2}{3}\vec{r}]=[n_x(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)-\frac{n^2}{3}x,n_y(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)-\frac{n^2}{3}y,n_z(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)-\frac{n^2}{3}z]##

So ##U=\int A_xdx=\int (n_x(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)-\frac{n^2}{3}x)dx=##
##=\int (n_x(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)-\frac{n^2}{3}x)dx=\int (xn_x^2+yn_yn_x+zn_zn_x-\frac{n^2}{3}x)dx=##
##=n_x^2\frac{x^2}{2}+(yn_yn_x+zn_zn_x)x-\frac{n^2}{6}x^2+C(z,y)##

Now ##\frac{\partial U}{\partial y}=xn_yn_x+\frac{\partial }{\partial y}C(z,y)## which should be equal to ##A_y=n_y(xn_x+yn_y+zn_z)-\frac{n^2}{3}y## meaning that ##\frac{\partial }{\partial y}C(z,y)=yn_y^2+zn_zn_y-\frac{n^2}{3}y##.

Therefore ##C=yzn_yn_z+\frac{n^2}{2}z^2-\frac{n^2}{6}z^2+D(z)##

Now if you don't mind... I think you already got the idea how I calculated this so if you don't mind, I will just write what Is my final expression for ##U##

##U=n_x^2\frac{x^2}{2}+(yn_yn_x+zn_zn_x)x-\frac{n^2}{6}x^2+C(z,y)=##
##=n_x^2\frac{x^2}{2}+(yn_yn_x+zn_zn_x)x-\frac{n^2}{6}x^2+2zyn_zn_y-\frac{n^2}{6}(y^2+z^2)+\frac{n_y^2}{2}y ^2+\frac{n_z^2}{2}z^2=##
##=(yn_yn_x+zn_zn_x)x+2zyn_zn_y-\frac{n^2}{6}(x^2+y^2+z^2)+\frac 1 2 (x^2n_x^2+y^2n_y^2+z^2n_z^2)##

Hopefully..
 

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