In
mathematics
Mathematics is a field of study that discovers and organizes methods, Mathematical theory, theories and theorems that are developed and Mathematical proof, proved for the needs of empirical sciences and mathematics itself. There are many ar ...
,
mathematical physics
Mathematical physics is the development of mathematics, mathematical methods for application to problems in physics. The ''Journal of Mathematical Physics'' defines the field as "the application of mathematics to problems in physics and the de ...
and the theory of
stochastic processes, a harmonic function is a twice
continuously differentiable function where is an
open subset of that satisfies
Laplace's equation, that is,
everywhere on . This is usually written as
or
Etymology of the term "harmonic"
The descriptor "harmonic" in the name "harmonic function" originates from a point on a taut string which is undergoing
harmonic motion. The solution to the differential equation for this type of motion can be written in terms of sines and cosines, functions which are thus referred to as "harmonics."
Fourier analysis involves expanding functions on the unit circle in terms of a series of these harmonics. Considering higher dimensional analogues of the harmonics on the unit
''n''-sphere, one arrives at the
spherical harmonics. These functions satisfy Laplace's equation and, over time, "harmonic" was
used to refer to all functions satisfying Laplace's equation.
Examples
Examples of harmonic functions of two variables are:
* The real or imaginary part of any
holomorphic function.
* The function
this is a special case of the example above, as
and
is a
holomorphic function. The second derivative with respect to ''x'' is
while the second derivative with respect to ''y'' is
* The function
defined on
This can describe the electric potential due to a line charge or the gravity potential due to a long cylindrical mass.
Examples of harmonic functions of three variables are given in the table below with
:
Harmonic functions that arise in physics are determined by their
singularities and boundary conditions (such as
Dirichlet boundary conditions or
Neumann boundary conditions). On regions without boundaries, adding the real or imaginary part of any
entire function will produce a harmonic function with the same singularity, so in this case the harmonic function is not determined by its singularities; however, we can make the solution unique in physical situations by requiring that the solution approaches 0 as r approaches infinity. In this case, uniqueness follows by
Liouville's theorem.
The singular points of the harmonic functions above are expressed as "
charges" and "
charge densities" using the terminology of
electrostatics
Electrostatics is a branch of physics that studies slow-moving or stationary electric charges.
Since classical antiquity, classical times, it has been known that some materials, such as amber, attract lightweight particles after triboelectric e ...
, and so the corresponding harmonic function will be proportional to the
electrostatic potential due to these charge distributions. Each function above will yield another harmonic function when multiplied by a constant, rotated, and/or has a constant added. The
inversion of each function will yield another harmonic function which has singularities which are the images of the original singularities in a spherical "mirror". Also, the sum of any two harmonic functions will yield another harmonic function.
Finally, examples of harmonic functions of variables are:
* The constant, linear and affine functions on all of (for example, the
electric potential
Electric potential (also called the ''electric field potential'', potential drop, the electrostatic potential) is defined as electric potential energy per unit of electric charge. More precisely, electric potential is the amount of work (physic ...
between the plates of a
capacitor, and the
gravity potential of a slab)
* The function
on
for .
Properties
The set of harmonic functions on a given open set can be seen as the
kernel of the
Laplace operator
In mathematics, the Laplace operator or Laplacian is a differential operator given by the divergence of the gradient of a Scalar field, scalar function on Euclidean space. It is usually denoted by the symbols \nabla\cdot\nabla, \nabla^2 (where \ ...
and is therefore a
vector space
In mathematics and physics, a vector space (also called a linear space) is a set (mathematics), set whose elements, often called vector (mathematics and physics), ''vectors'', can be added together and multiplied ("scaled") by numbers called sc ...
over linear combinations of harmonic functions are again harmonic.
If is a harmonic function on , then all
partial derivative
In mathematics, a partial derivative of a function of several variables is its derivative with respect to one of those variables, with the others held constant (as opposed to the total derivative, in which all variables are allowed to vary). P ...
s of are also harmonic functions on . The Laplace operator and the partial derivative operator will commute on this class of functions.
In several ways, the harmonic functions are real analogues to
holomorphic functions. All harmonic functions are
analytic, that is, they can be locally expressed as
power series. This is a general fact about
elliptic operators, of which the Laplacian is a major example.
The uniform limit of a convergent sequence of harmonic functions is still harmonic. This is true because every continuous function satisfying the mean value property is harmonic. Consider the sequence on defined by
this sequence is harmonic and converges uniformly to the zero function; however note that the partial derivatives are not uniformly convergent to the zero function (the derivative of the zero function). This example shows the importance of relying on the mean value property and continuity to argue that the limit is harmonic.
Connections with complex function theory
The real and imaginary part of any holomorphic function yield harmonic functions on (these are said to be a pair of
harmonic conjugate functions). Conversely, any harmonic function on an open subset of is ''locally'' the real part of a holomorphic function. This is immediately seen observing that, writing
the complex function
is holomorphic in because it satisfies the
Cauchy–Riemann equations. Therefore, locally has a primitive , and is the real part of up to a constant, as is the real part of
Although the above correspondence with holomorphic functions only holds for functions of two real variables, harmonic functions in variables still enjoy a number of properties typical of holomorphic functions. They are (real) analytic; they have a maximum principle and a mean-value principle; a theorem of removal of singularities as well as a Liouville theorem holds for them in analogy to the corresponding theorems in complex functions theory.
Properties of harmonic functions
Some important properties of harmonic functions can be deduced from Laplace's equation.
Regularity theorem for harmonic functions
Harmonic functions are infinitely differentiable in open sets. In fact, harmonic functions are
real analytic.
Maximum principle
Harmonic functions satisfy the following ''
maximum principle'': if is a nonempty
compact subset of , then restricted to attains its
maximum and minimum on the
boundary of . If is
connected, this means that cannot have local maxima or minima, other than the exceptional case where is
constant. Similar properties can be shown for
subharmonic functions.
The mean value property
If is a
ball with center and radius which is completely contained in the open set
then the value of a harmonic function
at the center of the ball is given by the average value of on the surface of the ball; this average value is also equal to the average value of in the interior of the ball. In other words,
where is the volume of the unit ball in dimensions and is the -dimensional surface measure.
Conversely, all locally integrable functions satisfying the (volume) mean-value property are both infinitely differentiable and harmonic.
In terms of
convolution
In mathematics (in particular, functional analysis), convolution is a operation (mathematics), mathematical operation on two function (mathematics), functions f and g that produces a third function f*g, as the integral of the product of the two ...
s, if
denotes the
characteristic function of the ball with radius about the origin, normalized so that
the function is harmonic on if and only if
for all x and r such that
Sketch of the proof. The proof of the mean-value property of the harmonic functions and its converse follows immediately observing that the non-homogeneous equation, for any
admits an easy explicit solution of class with compact support in . Thus, if is harmonic in
holds in the set of all points in with
Since is continuous in ,
converges to as showing the mean value property for in . Conversely, if is any
function satisfying the mean-value property in , that is,
holds in for all then, iterating times the convolution with one has:
so that is
because the -fold iterated convolution of is of class
with support . Since and are arbitrary, is
too. Moreover,
for all so that in by the fundamental theorem of the calculus of variations, proving the equivalence between harmonicity and mean-value property.
This statement of the mean value property can be generalized as follows: If is any spherically symmetric function
supported in such that
then
In other words, we can take the weighted average of about a point and recover . In particular, by taking to be a function, we can recover the value of at any point even if we only know how acts as a
distribution. See
Weyl's lemma.
Harnack's inequality
Let
be a connected set in a bounded domain .
Then for every non-negative harmonic function ,
Harnack's inequality
holds for some constant that depends only on and .
Removal of singularities
The following principle of removal of singularities holds for harmonic functions. If is a harmonic function defined on a dotted open subset
of , which is less singular at than the fundamental solution (for ), that is
then extends to a harmonic function on (compare
Riemann's theorem for functions of a complex variable).
Liouville's theorem
Theorem: If is a harmonic function defined on all of which is bounded above or bounded below, then is constant.
(Compare
Liouville's theorem for functions of a complex variable).
Edward Nelson gave a particularly short proof of this theorem for the case of bounded functions, using the mean value property mentioned above:
Given two points, choose two balls with the given points as centers and of equal radius. If the radius is large enough, the two balls will coincide except for an arbitrarily small proportion of their volume. Since is bounded, the averages of it over the two balls are arbitrarily close, and so assumes the same value at any two points.
The proof can be adapted to the case where the harmonic function is merely bounded above or below. By adding a constant and possibly multiplying by –1, we may assume that is non-negative. Then for any two points and , and any positive number , we let
We then consider the balls and where by the triangle inequality, the first ball is contained in the second.
By the averaging property and the monotonicity of the integral, we have
(Note that since is independent of , we denote it merely as .) In the last expression, we may multiply and divide by and use the averaging property again, to obtain
But as
the quantity
tends to 1. Thus,
The same argument with the roles of and reversed shows that
, so that
Another proof uses the fact that given a
Brownian motion in such that
we have
for all . In words, it says that a harmonic function defines a
martingale for the Brownian motion. Then a
probabilistic coupling argument finishes the proof.
Generalizations
Weakly harmonic function
A function (or, more generally, a
distribution) is
weakly harmonic if it satisfies Laplace's equation
in a
weak sense (or, equivalently, in the sense of distributions). A weakly harmonic function coincides almost everywhere with a strongly harmonic function, and is in particular smooth. A weakly harmonic distribution is precisely the distribution associated to a strongly harmonic function, and so also is smooth. This is
Weyl's lemma.
There are other
weak formulations of Laplace's equation that are often useful. One of which is
Dirichlet's principle, representing harmonic functions in the
Sobolev space as the minimizers of the
Dirichlet energy integral
with respect to local variations, that is, all functions
such that
holds for all
or equivalently, for all
Harmonic functions on manifolds
Harmonic functions can be defined on an arbitrary
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance, angles, length, volume, and curvature are defined. Euclidean space, the N-sphere, n-sphere, hyperbolic space, and smooth surf ...
, using the
Laplace–Beltrami operator . In this context, a function is called ''harmonic'' if
Many of the properties of harmonic functions on domains in Euclidean space carry over to this more general setting, including the mean value theorem (over
geodesic balls), the maximum principle, and the Harnack inequality. With the exception of the mean value theorem, these are easy consequences of the corresponding results for general linear
elliptic partial differential equations of the second order.
Subharmonic functions
A function that satisfies is called subharmonic. This condition guarantees that the maximum principle will hold, although other properties of harmonic functions may fail. More generally, a function is subharmonic if and only if, in the interior of any ball in its domain, its graph lies below that of the harmonic function interpolating its boundary values on the ball.
Harmonic forms
One generalization of the study of harmonic functions is the study of
harmonic forms on
Riemannian manifold
In differential geometry, a Riemannian manifold is a geometric space on which many geometric notions such as distance, angles, length, volume, and curvature are defined. Euclidean space, the N-sphere, n-sphere, hyperbolic space, and smooth surf ...
s, and it is related to the study of
cohomology. Also, it is possible to define harmonic vector-valued functions, or harmonic maps of two Riemannian manifolds, which are critical points of a generalized Dirichlet energy functional (this includes harmonic functions as a special case, a result known as
Dirichlet principle). This kind of harmonic map appears in the theory of minimal surfaces. For example, a curve, that is, a map from an interval in to a Riemannian manifold, is a harmonic map if and only if it is a
geodesic.
Harmonic maps between manifolds
If and are two Riemannian manifolds, then a harmonic map
is defined to be a critical point of the Dirichlet energy
in which
is the differential of , and the norm is that induced by the metric on and that on on the tensor product bundle
Important special cases of harmonic maps between manifolds include
minimal surfaces, which are precisely the harmonic immersions of a surface into three-dimensional Euclidean space. More generally, minimal submanifolds are harmonic immersions of one manifold in another.
Harmonic coordinates are a harmonic
diffeomorphism from a manifold to an open subset of a Euclidean space of the same dimension.
See also
*
Balayage
*
Biharmonic map
*
Dirichlet problem
*
Harmonic morphism
*
Harmonic polynomial
*
Heat equation
*
Laplace equation for irrotational flow
*
Poisson's equation
*
Quadrature domains
Notes
References
* .
* .
* .
* .
* .
External links
*
*
Harmonic Function Theory by S.Axler, Paul Bourdon, and Wade Ramey
{{DEFAULTSORT:Harmonic Function