Bipolar coordinates

Bipolar coordinates

Bipolar coordinates are a two-dimensional orthogonal coordinate system. There are two commonly defined types of bipolar coordinates. [http://bbs.sachina.pku.edu.cn/Stat/Math_World/math/b/b233.htm Eric W. Weisstein, Concise Encyclopedia of Mathematics CD-ROM, "Bipolar Coordinates", CD-ROM edition 1.0, May 20, 1999 ] ] The other system is two-center bipolar coordinates. There is also third coordinate system that based on two poles (biangular coordinates). First is based on the Apollonian circles. The curves of constant "σ" and of "τ" are circles that intersect at right angles. The coordinates have two foci "F"1 and "F"2, which are generally taken to be fixed at (−"a", 0) and ("a", 0), respectively, on the "x"-axis of a Cartesian coordinate system.

Bipolar coordinates form the basis for several sets of three-dimensional orthogonal coordinates. The bipolar cylindrical coordinates are produced by projecting in the "z"-direction. The bispherical coordinates are produced by rotating the bipolar coordinates about the x-axis, i.e., the axis connecting the foci, whereas the toroidal coordinates are produced by rotating the bipolar coordinates about the "y"-axis, i.e., the axis separating the foci.

The classic applications of bipolar coordinates are in solving partial differential equations, e.g., Laplace's equation or the Helmholtz equation, for which bipolar coordinates allow a separation of variables. A typical example would be the electric field surrounding two parallel cylindrical conductors.

The term "bipolar" is sometimes used to describe other curves having two singular points (foci), such as ellipses, hyperbolas, and Cassini ovals. However, the term "bipolar coordinates" is reserved for the coordinates described here, and never used to describe coordinates associated with those other curves, such as elliptic coordinates.

Basic definition

The most common definition of bipolar coordinates ("σ", "τ") is

:x = a frac{sinh au}{cosh au - cos sigma}

:y = a frac{sin sigma}{cosh au - cos sigma}

where the "σ"-coordinate of a point "P" equals the angle "F"1 "P" "F"2 and the "τ"-coordinate equals the natural logarithm of the ratio of the distances "d"1 and "d"2 to the foci

: au = ln frac{d_1}{d_2}

(Recall that "F"1 and "F"2 are located at (−"a", 0) and ("a", 0), respectively.)

It should be noted that the "σ" and "τ" isosurfaces intersect at two points, not one. The foci divide each "σ"-isosurface circle into a longer and shorter arc. By convention, the "σ" on these two arcs differ by 90°, i.e., "σ"shorter = "σ"longer + 90°; this convention breaks the degeneracy of the coordinate system.

Curves of constant "σ" and "τ"

The curves of constant "σ" correspond to non-concentric circles

:x^2 +left( y - a cot sigma ight)^2 = frac{a^{2{sin^2 sigma}

that intersect at the two foci. The centers of the constant-"σ" circles lie on the "y"-axis. Circles of positive "σ" are centered above the "x"-axis, whereas those of negative "σ" lie below the axis. As the magnitude |"σ"| increases, the radius of the circles decreases and the center approaches the origin (0, 0), which is reached when |"σ"| = "π"/2, its maximum value.

The curves of constant au are non-intersecting circles of different radii

:y^2 +left( x - a coth au ight)^2 = frac{a^2}{sinh^2 au}

that surround the foci but again are not concentric. The centers of the constant-"τ" circles lie on the "x"-axis. The circles of positive "τ" lie in the right-hand side of the plane ("x" > 0), whereas the circles of negative "τ" lie in the left-hand side of the plane ("x" < 0). The "τ" = 0 curve corresponds to the "y"-axis ("x" = 0). As the magnitude of "τ" increases, the radius of the circles decreases and their centers approach the foci.

cale factors

The scale factors for the bipolar coordinates ("&sigma;", "&tau;") are equal

:h_sigma = h_ au = frac{a}{cosh au - cossigma}

Thus, the infinitesimal area element equals

:dA = frac{a^2}{left( cosh au - cossigma ight)^2} , dsigma, d au

and the Laplacian is given by

: abla^2 Phi =frac{1}{a^2} left( cosh au - cossigma ight)^2left( frac{partial^2 Phi}{partial sigma^2} + frac{partial^2 Phi}{partial au^2} ight)

Other differential operators such as abla cdot mathbf{F} and abla imes mathbf{F} can be expressed in the coordinates ("σ", "τ") by substituting the scale factors into the general formulae found in orthogonal coordinates.

ee also

References

* H. Bateman "Spheroidal and bipolar coordinates", "Duke Mathematical Journal" 4 (1938), no. 1, 39–50
* Lockwood, E. H. "Bipolar Coordinates." Chapter 25 in "A Book of Curves". Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, pp. 186&ndash;190, 1967.
* Korn GA and Korn TM. (1961) "Mathematical Handbook for Scientists and Engineers", McGraw-Hill.

Notes


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Two-center bipolar coordinates — In mathematics, two center bipolar coordinates is a coordinate system, based on two coordinates which give distances from two fixed centers, C1 and C2 mathworld|urlname=BipolarCoordinates|title=Bipolar coordinates] This system is very useful in… …   Wikipedia

  • Bipolar cylindrical coordinates — are a three dimensional orthogonal coordinate system that results from projecting the two dimensional bipolar coordinate system in theperpendicular z direction. The two lines of foci F {1} and F {2} of the projected Apollonian circles are… …   Wikipedia

  • Bipolar — is a term used to define things with two (usually opposing) poles. It can refer to:In Medicine * Bipolar disorder and its subtypes: ** Bipolar I ** Bipolar II ** Cyclothymia * Bipolar cell, a second order neuron of the retina.In charitable… …   Wikipedia

  • Curvilinear coordinates — Curvilinear, affine, and Cartesian coordinates in two dimensional space Curvilinear coordinates are a coordinate system for Euclidean space in which the coordinate lines may be curved. These coordinates may be derived from a set of Cartesian… …   Wikipedia

  • Orthogonal coordinates — In mathematics, orthogonal coordinates are defined as a set of d coordinates q = (q1, q2, ..., qd) in which the coordinate surfaces all meet at right angles (note: superscripts are indices, not exponents). A coordinate surface for a particular… …   Wikipedia

  • Oblate spheroidal coordinates — Figure 1: Coordinate isosurfaces for a point P (shown as a black sphere) in oblate spheroidal coordinates (μ, ν, φ). The z axis is vertical, and the foci are at ±2. The red oblate spheroid (flattened sphere) corresponds to μ=1, whereas the blue… …   Wikipedia

  • Paraboloidal coordinates — are a three dimensional orthogonal coordinate system (λ,μ,ν) that generalizes the two dimensional parabolic coordinate system. Similar to the related ellipsoidal coordinates, the paraboloidal coordinate system has orthogonal quadratic coordinate… …   Wikipedia

  • Ellipsoidal coordinates — are a three dimensional orthogonal coordinate system (λ,μ,ν) that generalizes the two dimensional elliptic coordinate system. Unlike most three dimensional orthogonal coordinate systems that feature quadratic coordinate surfaces, the ellipsoidal… …   Wikipedia

  • Conical coordinates — Coordinate surfaces of the conical coordinates. The constants b and c were chosen as 1 and 2, respectively. The red sphere represents r=2, the blue elliptic cone aligned with the vertical z axis represents μ=cosh(1) and the yellow elliptic cone… …   Wikipedia

  • Toroidal coordinates — are a three dimensional orthogonal coordinate system that results from rotating the two dimensional bipolar coordinate system about the axis that separates its two foci. Thus, the two foci F {1} and F {2} in bipolar coordinates become a ring of… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”