What Is the Symbol \nabla^2? Definition & Explanation

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The symbol \nabla^2, referred to as the D'Alembertian or "box," is a second-order linear differential operator used in electrodynamics. It is defined as \Box = \partial^{\mu}\partial_{\mu}, incorporating both spatial and temporal derivatives. The discussion clarifies that the D'Alembertian extends the Laplacian by including time derivatives, specifically subtracting the second derivative with respect to time. The metric used in this context is diagonal, represented as \eta_{\mu\nu}=diag(+,+,+,-). Understanding this operator is crucial for studying wave equations and related physical phenomena.
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What's that symbol?

Today we've studied in the electrodynamique an affector named dalamperes affector defined as:

\nabla^2 - \frac{1}{c^2}\cdot\frac{\partial^2}{\partial t^2}

c is the speed of light in vacuum, t is time, \nabla is hameltons affector,

HERE IS THE QUESTION:

What's the name of the symbol used in that affector, the symbol is like a square and has the second degree, and does it have a definition for the first degree? and what is it? can some one explain everything about it?
 
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God,u mean the d'Alembertian,a.k.a.BOX...
Defined in SR as:
\Box =:\partial^{\mu}\partial_{\mu}
,its form depends on the metric chosen...In your case the metric is:
\eta_{\mu\nu}=diag \ (+,+,+,-) (rather uncharacteristic)

Nabla is no longer called Hamilton's...It's called simply nabla.

Daniel.
 
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Dextercioboy thank you for the specific answer, but i didn't understand:

1- What's the name of that symbol, is it aka box?
2- Does it have a first degree definition?
3- and what's the meaning of what's after Eta symbol you've written above?

Please try being more simple and specific with me, The language is causing me to not understand
 
D'ALEMBERT-IAN after the french mathematician Jean Le Rond d'Alembert,the one which discovered the waves' equation...

No.It's a second order linear differential operator...

You mean "diag"...?It's a shorthand notation for "diagonal".It means the matrix \hat{\eta} is diagonal...

On normal basis i should have written it:
(\hat{\eta})_{\mu\nu}=\left(\begin{array}{cccc}1&0&0&0\\0&1&0&0\\0&0&1&0\\0&0&0&-1\end{array}\right)

Daniel.
 
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Oh my god, calm down, why you're getting nervous so quickly,

...


......

It's better for me to not understand, thanks
 
Who said i wasn't calm...?:confused:I took it as u didn't see the name very clearly & that's why i wrote it bigger,nothing else...

Daniel.
 
Thank you anyway dextercioboy, you're a genius in maths and physics and that doesn't help you to teach a university boy like me, i'll try finding the solution in our library and internet,
 
? He answered precisely your question : the symbol you asked about is called, informally, "box", similar to "del" for the upside down triangle symbol, and, more formally, the "D'Alembertian". It is an extension of the LaPlacian: where the LaPlacian, in 3 dim space, is the sum of the second derivatives wrt each coordinate, the D'Alembertian includes subtracting the second derivative wrt time.

"box" f= \frac{\partial^2 f}{/partial x^2}+ \frac{\partial^2f}{/partial y^2}+ \frac{\partial^2 f}{/partial z}- \frac{\partial^2f}{/partial t^2}
 
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