In 2-D Polar Coordinates, attempt Separation of Variables by writing
 |
(1) |
then the Helmholtz Differential Equation becomes
 |
(2) |
Divide both sides by
 |
(3) |
The solution to the second part of (3) must be periodic, so the differential equation is
 |
(4) |
which has solutions
Plug (4) back into (3)
 |
(6) |
This is an Euler Differential Equation with
and
. The roots are
.
So for
,
and the solution is
 |
(7) |
But since
blows up at
, the only possible physical solution is
. When
,
, so
 |
(8) |
But since
blows up at
, the only possible physical solution is
. The solution for
is
then
 |
(9) |
for
, 1, ...and the general solution is
![\begin{displaymath}
F(r, \theta) = \sum_{m=0}^\infty [a_mr^m\sin (\sqrt{k^2+m^2}\,\theta)+b_mr^m\cos(\sqrt{k^2+m^2}\,\theta)].
\end{displaymath}](h_1103.gif) |
(10) |
References
Morse, P. M. and Feshbach, H. Methods of Theoretical Physics, Part I. New York:
McGraw-Hill, pp. 502-504, 1953.
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein
1999-05-25