What are the eigenfunctions of the spherical Fourier transform?

christianjb
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Does anyone know what the eigenfunctions of the spherical Fourier transform are? I want to expand a spherically symmetric function in these eigenfunctions.

Are they Bessel functions? Legendre functions?
 
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HallsofIvy said:
They are the "spherical harmonics". Yes, they involve teh Legendre functions. Check this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherical_harmonics#Spherical_harmonics_expansion.


Thanks.

I have a spherically symmetric function - i.e. no theta/phi dependence. The spherical harmonics account for only the theta/phi dependence- or am I missing something?
 
In that case your equation should reduce to an ordinary differential equation in \rho and, if I remember correctly, for the Laplace operator, at least, it is an "Euler type" equation with powers of \rho as solution.
 
I'm not solving a differential eqn. I'm looking for an orthogonal basis where each basis function is an eigenfunction of the spherical Fourier transform.
 
I'm pretty sure you can still expand it in terms of A \sin kr + B \cos kr. It is, after all, some function of r, so you can just Fourier-transform it normally. If not, then try

\frac{A}{r} \sin kr + \frac{B}{r} \cos kr

This is a solution of the wave equation in 3 dimensions, in the same since that sin and cos are solutions in 1 dimension, and Bessel functions are solutions in 2 dimensions.

I could be totally wrong here, though.

Yet another option is to write down the 3D Fourier transform in Cartesian coordinates, and transform it to spherical coordinates.
 
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Thanks- but I'm specifically looking for the eigenfunctions of the spherically symmetric Fourier transform. I've already got numerical solutions for the spherical FT.
 
Tschew said:
Hi, this is a very late reply but I found your post as one of the first results in a google search and thought other people searching would find the following link interesting:

Fourier Analysis in Polar and Spherical Coordinates

http://lmb.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/papers/download/wa_report01_08.pdf

Thanks a LOT, dude, this paper just really helped me! Good thing that the internet doesn't forget so even such old threads can be helpful.
 
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