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Vector fields in cylindrical and spherical coordinates



         



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Vector fields in cylindrical coordinates

Vectors are defined in cylindrical coordinates by (ρ,φ,z), where

(ρ,φ,z) is given in cartesian coordinates by:

<math>\left[\begin{matrix}
\rho & = & \sqrt{x^2 + y^2} \\ \phi & = & \operatorname{atan2}(y, x) \\ z & = & z \end{matrix}\right.<math>

or inversely by:

<math>\left[\begin{matrix}
x & = & \rho\cos\phi \\ y & = & \rho\sin\phi \\ z & = & z \end{matrix}\right.<math>


Any vector field can be written in terms of the unit vectors as:

<math>\mathbf A = A_x\mathbf{\hat x} + A_y\mathbf{\hat y} + A_z\mathbf{\hat z}
= A_\rho\boldsymbol{\hat \rho} + A_\phi\boldsymbol{\hat \phi} + A_z\boldsymbol{\hat z}<math>

The cylindrical unit vectors are related to the cartesian unit vectors by:

<math>\begin{bmatrix}\boldsymbol\hat\rho \\ \boldsymbol\hat\phi \\ \boldsymbol\hat z\end{bmatrix}
= \begin{bmatrix} \cos\phi & \sin\phi & 0 \\ -\sin\phi & \cos\phi & 0 \\ 0 & 0 & 1 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \mathbf\hat x \\ \mathbf\hat y \\ \mathbf\hat z \end{bmatrix}<math>
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Time derivative of a vector field in cylindrical coordinates

To find out how the vector field A changes in time we calculate the time derivatives. In cartesian coordinates this is simply:

<math>\mathbf\dot A = \dot A_x \mathbf\hat x + \dot A_y \mathbf\hat y + \dot A_z \mathbf\hat z<math>

However, in cylindrical coordinates this becomes:

<math>\mathbf\dot A = \dot A_\rho \boldsymbol\hat\rho + A_\rho \boldsymbol\dot\hat\rho
+ \dot A_\phi \boldsymbol\hat\phi + A_\phi \boldsymbol\dot\hat\phi + \dot A_z \boldsymbol\hat z + A_z \boldsymbol\dot\hat z<math>

We need the time derivatives of the unit vectors. They are given by:

<math>\left[\begin{matrix}
\boldsymbol\dot\hat\rho & = & \dot\phi \boldsymbol\hat\phi \\ \boldsymbol\dot\hat\phi & = & - \dot\phi \boldsymbol\hat\rho \\ \boldsymbol\dot\hat z & = & 0 \end{matrix}\right.<math>

So the time derivative simplifies to:

<math>\mathbf\dot A = \boldsymbol\hat\rho (\dot A_\rho - A_\phi \dot\phi)
+ \boldsymbol\hat\phi (\dot A_\phi + A_\rho \dot\phi) + \boldsymbol\hat z \dot A_z<math>
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Gradient, divergence, curl, and laplacian in cylindrical coordinates

The specification of gradient, divergence, curl, and laplacian in cylindrical coordinates can be found in the article Nabla in cylindrical and spherical coordinates.


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Vector fields in spherical coordinates

Vectors are defined in spherical coordinates by (r,θ,φ), where

(r,θ,φ) is given in cartesian coordinates by:

<math>\left[\begin{matrix}
r & = & \sqrt{x^2 + y^2 + z^2} \\ \theta & = & \arccos(z / r) \\ \phi & = & \operatorname{atan2}(y, x) \end{matrix}\right.<math>

or inversely by:

<math>\left[\begin{matrix}
x & = & r\sin\theta\cos\phi \\ y & = & r\sin\theta\sin\phi \\ z & = & r\cos\theta \end{matrix}\right.<math>

Any vector field can be written in terms of the unit vectors as:

<math>\mathbf A = A_x\mathbf{\hat x} + A_y\mathbf{\hat y} + A_z\mathbf{\hat z}
= A_r\boldsymbol{\hat r} + A_\theta\boldsymbol{\hat \theta} + A_\phi\boldsymbol{\hat \phi}<math>

The spherical unit vectors are related to the cartesian unit vectors by:

<math>\begin{bmatrix}\boldsymbol\hat r \\ \boldsymbol\hat\theta \\ \boldsymbol\hat\phi \end{bmatrix}
= \begin{bmatrix} \sin\theta\cos\phi & \sin\theta\sin\phi & \cos\theta \\ \cos\theta\cos\phi & \cos\theta\sin\phi & -\sin\theta \\ -\sin\phi & \cos\phi & 0 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \mathbf\hat x \\ \mathbf\hat y \\ \mathbf\hat z \end{bmatrix}<math>
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Time derivative of a vector field in spherical coordinates

To find out how the vector field A changes in time we calculate the time derivatives. In cartesian coordinates this is simply:

<math>\mathbf\dot A = \dot A_x \mathbf\hat x + \dot A_y \mathbf\hat y + \dot A_z \mathbf\hat z<math>

However, in spherical coordinates this becomes:

<math>\mathbf\dot A = \dot A_r \boldsymbol\hat r + A_r \boldsymbol\dot\hat r
+ \dot A_\theta \boldsymbol\hat\theta + A_\theta \boldsymbol\dot\hat\theta + \dot A_\phi \boldsymbol\hat\phi + A_\phi \boldsymbol\dot\hat\phi<math>

We need the time derivatives of the unit vectors. They are given by:

<math>\begin{bmatrix}\boldsymbol\dot\hat r \\ \boldsymbol\dot\hat\theta \\ \boldsymbol\dot\hat\phi \end{bmatrix}
= \begin{bmatrix} 0 & \dot\theta & \dot\phi \sin\theta \\ -\dot\theta & 0 & \dot\phi \cos\theta \\ -\dot\phi \sin\theta & -\dot\phi \cos\theta & 0 \end{bmatrix} \begin{bmatrix} \boldsymbol\hat r \\ \boldsymbol\hat\theta \\ \boldsymbol\hat\phi \end{bmatrix}<math>

So the time derivative becomes:

<math>\mathbf\dot A = \boldsymbol\hat r (\dot A_r - A_\theta \dot\theta - A_\phi \dot\phi \sin\theta)
+ \boldsymbol\hat\theta (\dot A_\theta + A_r \dot\theta - A_\phi \dot\phi \cos\theta) + \boldsymbol\hat\phi (\dot A_\phi + A_r \dot\phi \sin\theta + A_\phi \dot\phi \cos\theta)<math>
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Gradient, divergence, curl, and laplacian in spherical coordinates

The specification of gradient, divergence, curl, and laplacian in spherical coordinates can be found in the article Nabla in cylindrical and spherical coordinates.





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