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A multipole expansion is a mathematical series representing a function that depends on angles—usually the two angles used in the
spherical coordinate system In mathematics, a spherical coordinate system is a coordinate system for three-dimensional space where the position of a point is specified by three numbers: the ''radial distance'' of that point from a fixed origin, its ''polar angle'' measu ...
(the polar and azimuthal angles) for three-dimensional Euclidean space, \R^3. Similarly to Taylor series, multipole expansions are useful because oftentimes only the first few terms are needed to provide a good approximation of the original function. The function being expanded may be real- or complex-valued and is defined either on \R^3, or less often on \R^n for some other Multipole expansions are used frequently in the study of electromagnetic and
gravitational field In physics, a gravitational field is a model used to explain the influences that a massive body extends into the space around itself, producing a force on another massive body. Thus, a gravitational field is used to explain gravitational phenome ...
s, where the fields at distant points are given in terms of sources in a small region. The multipole expansion with angles is often combined with an expansion in radius. Such a combination gives an expansion describing a function throughout three-dimensional space. The multipole expansion is expressed as a sum of terms with progressively finer angular features ( moments). The first (the zeroth-order) term is called the monopole moment, the second (the first-order) term is called the dipole moment, the third (the second-order) the quadrupole moment, the fourth (third-order) term is called the octupole moment, and so on. Given the limitation of Greek numeral prefixes, terms of higher order are conventionally named by adding "-pole" to the number of poles—e.g., 32-pole (rarely dotriacontapole or triacontadipole) and 64-pole (rarely tetrahexacontapole or hexacontatetrapole). A multipole moment usually involves
powers Powers may refer to: Arts and media * ''Powers'' (comics), a comic book series by Brian Michael Bendis and Michael Avon Oeming ** ''Powers'' (American TV series), a 2015–2016 series based on the comics * ''Powers'' (British TV series), a 200 ...
(or inverse powers) of the distance to the origin, as well as some angular dependence. In principle, a multipole expansion provides an exact description of the potential, and generally converges under two conditions: (1) if the sources (e.g. charges) are localized close to the origin and the point at which the potential is observed is far from the origin; or (2) the reverse, i.e., if the sources are located far from the origin and the potential is observed close to the origin. In the first (more common) case, the coefficients of the series expansion are called ''exterior multipole moments'' or simply ''multipole moments'' whereas, in the second case, they are called ''interior multipole moments''.


Expansion in spherical harmonics

Most commonly, the series is written as a sum of spherical harmonics. Thus, we might write a function f(\theta,\varphi) as the sum f(\theta,\varphi) = \sum_^\infty\, \sum_^\ell\, C^m_\ell\, Y^m_\ell(\theta,\varphi) where Y^m_\ell(\theta,\varphi) are the standard spherical harmonics, and C^m_\ell are constant coefficients which depend on the function. The term C^0_0 represents the monopole; C^_1,C^0_1,C^1_1 represent the dipole; and so on. Equivalently, the series is also frequently written as f(\theta,\varphi) = C + C_i n^i + C_n^i n^j + C_n^i n^j n^k + C_n^i n^j n^k n^\ell + \cdots where the n^i represent the components of a unit vector in the direction given by the angles \theta and \varphi, and indices are implicitly summed. Here, the term C is the monopole; C_i is a set of three numbers representing the dipole; and so on. In the above expansions, the coefficients may be real or complex. If the function being expressed as a multipole expansion is real, however, the coefficients must satisfy certain properties. In the spherical harmonic expansion, we must have C_\ell^ = (-1)^m C^_\ell \, . In the multi-vector expansion, each coefficient must be real: C = C^\ast;\ C_i = C_i^\ast;\ C_ = C_^\ast;\ C_ = C_^\ast;\ \ldots While expansions of
scalar Scalar may refer to: *Scalar (mathematics), an element of a field, which is used to define a vector space, usually the field of real numbers * Scalar (physics), a physical quantity that can be described by a single element of a number field such ...
functions are by far the most common application of multipole expansions, they may also be generalized to describe tensors of arbitrary rank. This finds use in multipole expansions of the vector potential in electromagnetism, or the metric perturbation in the description of
gravitational wave Gravitational waves are waves of the intensity of gravity generated by the accelerated masses of an orbital binary system that propagate as waves outward from their source at the speed of light. They were first proposed by Oliver Heaviside in 1 ...
s. For describing functions of three dimensions, away from the coordinate origin, the coefficients of the multipole expansion can be written as functions of the distance to the origin, r—most frequently, as a
Laurent series In mathematics, the Laurent series of a complex function f(z) is a representation of that function as a power series which includes terms of negative degree. It may be used to express complex functions in cases where a Taylor series expansion c ...
in powers of r. For example, to describe the electromagnetic potential, V, from a source in a small region near the origin, the coefficients may be written as: V(r,\theta,\varphi) = \sum_^\infty\, \sum_^\ell C^m_\ell(r)\, Y^m_\ell(\theta,\varphi)= \sum_^\infty\, \sum_^\infty\, \sum_^\ell \frac\, Y^m_\ell(\theta,\varphi) .


Applications

Multipole expansions are widely used in problems involving
gravitational field In physics, a gravitational field is a model used to explain the influences that a massive body extends into the space around itself, producing a force on another massive body. Thus, a gravitational field is used to explain gravitational phenome ...
s of systems of masses, electric and
magnetic field A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges, electric currents, and magnetic materials. A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular to its own velocity and to ...
s of charge and current distributions, and the propagation of electromagnetic waves. A classic example is the calculation of the ''exterior'' multipole moments of
atomic nuclei The atomic nucleus is the small, dense region consisting of protons and neutrons at the center of an atom, discovered in 1911 by Ernest Rutherford based on the 1909 Geiger–Marsden gold foil experiment. After the discovery of the neutron in ...
from their interaction energies with the ''interior'' multipoles of the electronic orbitals. The multipole moments of the nuclei report on the distribution of charges within the nucleus and, thus, on the shape of the nucleus. Truncation of the multipole expansion to its first non-zero term is often useful for theoretical calculations. Multipole expansions are also useful in numerical simulations, and form the basis of the fast multipole method of Greengard and Rokhlin, a general technique for efficient computation of energies and forces in systems of interacting particles. The basic idea is to decompose the particles into groups; particles within a group interact normally (i.e., by the full potential), whereas the energies and forces between groups of particles are calculated from their multipole moments. The efficiency of the fast multipole method is generally similar to that of Ewald summation, but is superior if the particles are clustered, i.e. the system has large density fluctuations.


Multipole expansion of a potential outside an electrostatic charge distribution

Consider a discrete charge distribution consisting of point charges with position vectors . We assume the charges to be clustered around the origin, so that for all ''i'': , where has some finite value. The potential , due to the charge distribution, at a point outside the charge distribution, i.e., , can be expanded in powers of . Two ways of making this expansion can be found in the literature: The first is a Taylor series in the
Cartesian coordinates A Cartesian coordinate system (, ) in a plane is a coordinate system that specifies each point uniquely by a pair of numerical coordinates, which are the signed distances to the point from two fixed perpendicular oriented lines, measured in t ...
, , and , while the second is in terms of spherical harmonics which depend on spherical polar coordinates. The Cartesian approach has the advantage that no prior knowledge of Legendre functions, spherical harmonics, etc., is required. Its disadvantage is that the derivations are fairly cumbersome (in fact a large part of it is the implicit rederivation of the Legendre expansion of , which was done once and for all by Legendre in the 1780s). Also it is difficult to give a closed expression for a general term of the multipole expansion—usually only the first few terms are given followed by an ellipsis.


Expansion in Cartesian coordinates

Let v satisfy v(x) = v(-x). Then the Taylor expansion of around the origin can be written v(\mathbf- \mathbf) = v(\mathbf) - \sum_ r_\alpha v_\alpha(\mathbf) +\frac \sum_\sum_ r_\alpha r_\beta v_(\mathbf) - \cdots + \cdots with v_\alpha(\mathbf) \equiv\left( \frac\right)_ \quad\text \quad v_(\mathbf) \equiv\left( \frac\right)_ . If satisfies the Laplace equation \left(\nabla^2 v(\mathbf- \mathbf)\right)_ = \sum_ v_(\mathbf) = 0 then the expansion can be rewritten in terms of the components of a traceless Cartesian second rank tensor: \sum_\sum_ r_\alpha r_\beta v_(\mathbf) = \frac \sum_\sum_ (3r_\alpha r_\beta - \delta_ r^2) v_(\mathbf) , where is the Kronecker delta and . Removing the trace is common, because it takes the rotationally invariant out of the second rank tensor. Example Consider now the following form of : v(\mathbf- \mathbf) \equiv \frac . Then by direct differentiation it follows that v(\mathbf) = \frac,\quad v_\alpha(\mathbf)= -\frac,\quad \hbox\quad v_(\mathbf) = \frac . Define a monopole, dipole, and (traceless) quadrupole by, respectively, q_\mathrm \equiv \sum_^N q_i , \quad P_\alpha \equiv\sum_^N q_i r_ , \quad \text\quad Q_ \equiv \sum_^N q_i (3r_ r_ - \delta_ r_i^2) , and we obtain finally the first few terms of the multipole expansion of the total potential, which is the sum of the Coulomb potentials of the separate charges: \begin 4\pi\varepsilon_0 V(\mathbf) &\equiv \sum_^N q_i v(\mathbf_i-\mathbf) \\ &= \frac + \frac\sum_ P_\alpha R_\alpha + \frac\sum_ Q_ R_\alpha R_\beta + \cdots \end This expansion of the potential of a discrete charge distribution is very similar to the one in real solid harmonics given below. The main difference is that the present one is in terms of linearly dependent quantities, for \sum_ v_ = 0 \quad \hbox \quad \sum_ Q_ = 0 . NOTE: If the charge distribution consists of two charges of opposite sign which are an infinitesimal distance apart, so that , it is easily shown that the only non-vanishing term in the expansion is V(\mathbf) = \frac (\mathbf\cdot\mathbf) , the electric dipolar potential field.


Spherical form

The potential at a point outside the charge distribution, i.e. , can be expanded by the Laplace expansion: V(\mathbf) \equiv \sum_^N \frac =\frac \sum_^\infty \sum_^ (-1)^m I^_\ell(\mathbf) \sum_^N q_i R^m_\ell(\mathbf_i), where I^_(\mathbf) is an irregular
solid harmonic In physics and mathematics, the solid harmonics are solutions of the Laplace equation in spherical polar coordinates, assumed to be (smooth) functions \mathbb^3 \to \mathbb. There are two kinds: the ''regular solid harmonics'' R^m_\ell(\mathbf), wh ...
(defined below as a spherical harmonic function divided by R^) and R^m_(\mathbf) is a regular solid harmonic (a spherical harmonic times ). We define the ''spherical multipole moment'' of the charge distribution as follows Q^m_\ell \equiv \sum_^N q_i R^m_\ell(\mathbf_i),\quad\ -\ell \le m \le \ell. Note that a multipole moment is solely determined by the charge distribution (the positions and magnitudes of the ''N'' charges). A spherical harmonic depends on the unit vector \hat. (A unit vector is determined by two spherical polar angles.) Thus, by definition, the irregular solid harmonics can be written as I^m_(\mathbf) \equiv \sqrt \frac so that the ''multipole expansion'' of the field at the point outside the charge distribution is given by \begin V(\mathbf) & = \frac\sum_^ \sum_^(-1)^ I^_(\mathbf) Q^_\\ & = \frac\sum_^\left frac\right\;\frac \sum_^(-1)^ Y^_(\hat) Q^_, \qquad R > r_ \end This expansion is completely general in that it gives a closed form for all terms, not just for the first few. It shows that the spherical multipole moments appear as coefficients in the expansion of the potential. It is of interest to consider the first few terms in real form, which are the only terms commonly found in undergraduate textbooks. Since the summand of the ''m'' summation is invariant under a unitary transformation of both factors simultaneously and since transformation of complex spherical harmonics to real form is by a unitary transformation, we can simply substitute real irregular solid harmonics and real multipole moments. The term becomes V_(\mathbf) = \frac \quad\hbox\quad q_\mathrm\equiv\sum_^N q_i. This is in fact Coulomb's law again. For the term we introduce \mathbf = (R_x, R_y, R_z),\quad \mathbf = (P_x, P_y, P_z)\quad \hbox\quad P_\alpha \equiv \sum_^N q_i r_, \quad \alpha=x,y,z. Then V_(\mathbf) = \frac (R_x P_x +R_y P_y + R_z P_z) = \frac = \frac. This term is identical to the one found in Cartesian form. In order to write the term, we have to introduce shorthand notations for the five real components of the quadrupole moment and the real spherical harmonics. Notations of the type Q_ \equiv \sum_^N q_i\; \frac(3z_i^2 - r_i^2), can be found in the literature. Clearly the real notation becomes awkward very soon, exhibiting the usefulness of the complex notation.


Interaction of two non-overlapping charge distributions

Consider two sets of point charges, one set clustered around a point and one set clustered around a point . Think for example of two molecules, and recall that a molecule by definition consists of electrons (negative point charges) and nuclei (positive point charges). The total electrostatic interaction energy between the two distributions is U_ = \sum_ \sum_ \frac. This energy can be expanded in a power series in the inverse distance of and . This expansion is known as the multipole expansion of ''U''''AB''. In order to derive this multipole expansion, we write , which is a vector pointing from towards . Note that \mathbf_+\mathbf_+\mathbf_+\mathbf_ = 0 \quad \iff \quad \mathbf_ = \mathbf_-\mathbf_+\mathbf_ . We assume that the two distributions do not overlap: , \mathbf_, > , \mathbf_-\mathbf_, \text i,j. Under this condition we may apply the Laplace expansion in the following form \frac = \frac = \sum_^\infty \sum_^L \, (-1)^M I_L^(\mathbf_)\; R^M_L( \mathbf_ - \mathbf_), where I^M_L and R^M_L are irregular and regular solid harmonics, respectively. The translation of the regular solid harmonic gives a finite expansion, R^M_L(\mathbf_-\mathbf_) = \sum_^L (-1)^ \binom^ \times \sum_^ R^_(\mathbf_) R^_(\mathbf_)\; \langle \ell_A, m_A; L-\ell_A, M-m_A\mid L M \rangle, where the quantity between pointed brackets is a Clebsch–Gordan coefficient. Further we used R^_(-\mathbf) = (-1)^ R^_(\mathbf) . Use of the definition of spherical multipoles and covering of the summation ranges in a somewhat different order (which is only allowed for an infinite range of ) gives finally \begin U_ = & \frac \sum_^\infty \sum_^\infty (-1)^ \binom^ \\ pt& \times \sum_^ \sum_^(-1)^ I_^(\mathbf_)\; Q^_ Q^_\; \langle \ell_A, m_A; \ell_B, m_B\mid \ell_A+\ell_B, m_A+m_B \rangle. \end This is the multipole expansion of the interaction energy of two non-overlapping charge distributions which are a distance ''R''''AB'' apart. Since I_^(\mathbf_) \equiv \left frac\right\; \frac, this expansion is manifestly in powers of . The function is a normalized spherical harmonic.


Molecular moments

All atoms and molecules (except ''S''-state atoms) have one or more non-vanishing permanent multipole moments. Different definitions can be found in the literature, but the following definition in spherical form has the advantage that it is contained in one general equation. Because it is in complex form it has as the further advantage that it is easier to manipulate in calculations than its real counterpart. We consider a molecule consisting of ''N'' particles (electrons and nuclei) with charges ''eZ''''i''. (Electrons have a ''Z''-value of −1, while for nuclei it is the atomic number). Particle ''i'' has spherical polar coordinates ''r''''i'', ''θ''''i'', and φ''i'' and Cartesian coordinates ''x''''i'', ''y''''i'', and ''z''''i''. The (complex) electrostatic multipole operator is Q^m_\ell \equiv \sum_^N e Z_i \; R^m_(\mathbf_i), where R^m_(\mathbf_i) is a regular
solid harmonic In physics and mathematics, the solid harmonics are solutions of the Laplace equation in spherical polar coordinates, assumed to be (smooth) functions \mathbb^3 \to \mathbb. There are two kinds: the ''regular solid harmonics'' R^m_\ell(\mathbf), wh ...
function in Racah's normalization (also known as Schmidt's semi-normalization). If the molecule has total normalized wave function Ψ (depending on the coordinates of electrons and nuclei), then the multipole moment of order \ell of the molecule is given by the expectation (expected) value: M^m_\ell \equiv \langle \Psi \mid Q^m_\ell \mid \Psi \rangle. If the molecule has certain point group symmetry, then this is reflected in the wave function: Ψ transforms according to a certain
irreducible representation In mathematics, specifically in the representation theory of groups and algebras, an irreducible representation (\rho, V) or irrep of an algebraic structure A is a nonzero representation that has no proper nontrivial subrepresentation (\rho, _W,W ...
λ of the group ("Ψ has symmetry type λ"). This has the consequence that selection rules hold for the expectation value of the multipole operator, or in other words, that the expectation value may vanish because of symmetry. A well-known example of this is the fact that molecules with an inversion center do not carry a dipole (the expectation values of Q^m_1 vanish for . For a molecule without symmetry, no selection rules are operative and such a molecule will have non-vanishing multipoles of any order (it will carry a dipole and simultaneously a quadrupole, octupole, hexadecapole, etc.). The lowest explicit forms of the regular solid harmonics (with the Condon-Shortley phase) give: M^0_0 = \sum_^N e Z_i, (the total charge of the molecule). The (complex) dipole components are: M^1_1 = - \tfrac \sum_^N e Z_i \langle \Psi , x_i+iy_i , \Psi \rangle\quad \hbox \quad M^_ = \tfrac \sum_^N e Z_i \langle \Psi , x_i - iy_i , \Psi \rangle. M^0_1 = \sum_^N e Z_i \langle \Psi , z_i , \Psi \rangle. Note that by a simple linear combination one can transform the complex multipole operators to real ones. The real multipole operators are of cosine type C^m_\ell or sine type S^m_\ell. A few of the lowest ones are: \begin C^0_1 &= \sum_^N eZ_i \; z_i \\ C^1_1 &= \sum_^N eZ_i \;x_i \\ S^1_1 &= \sum_^N eZ_i \;y_i \\ C^0_2 &= \frac\sum_^N eZ_i\; (3z_i^2-r_i^2)\\ C^1_2 &= \sqrt\sum_^N eZ_i\; z_i x_i \\ C^2_2 &= \frac\sqrt\sum_^N eZ_i\; (x_i^2-y_i^2) \\ S^1_2 &= \sqrt\sum_^N eZ_i\; z_i y_i \\ S^2_2 &= \frac\sqrt\sum_^N eZ_i\; x_iy_i \end


Note on conventions

The definition of the complex molecular multipole moment given above is the complex conjugate of the definition given in this article, which follows the definition of the standard textbook on classical electrodynamics by Jackson, except for the normalization. Moreover, in the classical definition of Jackson the equivalent of the ''N''-particle quantum mechanical expectation value is an integral over a one-particle charge distribution. Remember that in the case of a one-particle quantum mechanical system the expectation value is nothing but an integral over the charge distribution (modulus of wavefunction squared), so that the definition of this article is a quantum mechanical ''N''-particle generalization of Jackson's definition. The definition in this article agrees with, among others, the one of Fano and Racah and Brink and Satchler.D. M. Brink and G. R. Satchler, ''Angular Momentum'', 2nd edition, Clarendon Press, Oxford, UK (1968). p. 64. See also footnote on p. 90.


Examples

There are many types of multipole moments, since there are many types of potentials and many ways of approximating a potential by a series expansion, depending on the
coordinates In geometry, a coordinate system is a system that uses one or more numbers, or coordinates, to uniquely determine the position of the points or other geometric elements on a manifold such as Euclidean space. The order of the coordinates is sig ...
and the
symmetry Symmetry (from grc, συμμετρία "agreement in dimensions, due proportion, arrangement") in everyday language refers to a sense of harmonious and beautiful proportion and balance. In mathematics, "symmetry" has a more precise definit ...
of the charge distribution. The most common expansions include: * Axial multipole moments of a potential; * Spherical multipole moments of a potential; and * Cylindrical multipole moments of a potential Examples of potentials include the electric potential, the
magnetic potential Magnetic potential may refer to: * Magnetic vector potential, the vector whose curl is equal to the magnetic B field * Magnetic scalar potential Magnetic scalar potential, ''ψ'', is a quantity in classical electromagnetism analogous to electr ...
and the gravitational potential of point sources. An example of a {{math, ln ''R'' potential is the electric potential of an infinite line charge.


General mathematical properties

Multipole moments in
mathematics Mathematics is an area of knowledge that includes the topics of numbers, formulas and related structures, shapes and the spaces in which they are contained, and quantities and their changes. These topics are represented in modern mathematics ...
and mathematical physics form an orthogonal basis for the decomposition of a function, based on the response of a field to point sources that are brought infinitely close to each other. These can be thought of as arranged in various geometrical shapes, or, in the sense of distribution theory, as directional derivatives. Multipole expansions are related to the underlying rotational symmetry of the physical laws and their associated differential equations. Even though the source terms (such as the masses, charges, or currents) may not be symmetrical, one can expand them in terms of irreducible representations of the rotational
symmetry group In group theory, the symmetry group of a geometric object is the group of all transformations under which the object is invariant, endowed with the group operation of composition. Such a transformation is an invertible mapping of the ambient ...
, which leads to spherical harmonics and related sets of
orthogonal In mathematics, orthogonality is the generalization of the geometric notion of ''perpendicularity''. By extension, orthogonality is also used to refer to the separation of specific features of a system. The term also has specialized meanings in ...
functions. One uses the technique of separation of variables to extract the corresponding solutions for the radial dependencies. In practice, many fields can be well approximated with a finite number of multipole moments (although an infinite number may be required to reconstruct a field exactly). A typical application is to approximate the field of a localized charge distribution by its monopole and dipole terms. Problems solved once for a given order of multipole moment may be linearly combined to create a final approximate solution for a given source.


See also

*
Barnes–Hut simulation The Barnes–Hut simulation (named after Josh Barnes and Piet Hut) is an approximation algorithm for performing an ''n''-body simulation. It is notable for having order O(''n'' log ''n'') compared to a direct-sum algorithm which would b ...
* Fast multipole method * Laplace expansion * Legendre polynomials * Quadrupole magnets are used in particle accelerators * Solid harmonics *
Toroidal moment A toroidal moment is an independent term in the multipole expansion of electromagnetic fields besides magnetic and electric multipoles. In the electrostatic multipole expansion, all charge and current distributions can be expanded into a complete ...


References

Potential theory Vector calculus Moment (physics)