alejandrito20 Posted April 3, 2010 Posted April 3, 2010 (edited) i need to evaluate [math](A'e^{nA})'[/math],where [math]A=kte |\phi|[/math],with [math]\phi[/math] a angular coordinate between [math](-\pi,\pi)[/math] upon a line integration over a closed path along the coordinate angular [math]\phi[/math].......¿why the result is zero? ....' is the derivate on [math]\phi[/math] Edited April 4, 2010 by alejandrito20
Amr Morsi Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 Do you know the equation of the path? Or, it is simply r*phi? If so, are you sure that the bounded integral is zero?
the tree Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 Argh, so many letters. I'm guessing the primes are for first derivatives, but with respect to what? And is e|phi| meant to read e|phi|? Knowing what path would certainly be helpful as well.
alejandrito20 Posted April 4, 2010 Author Posted April 4, 2010 Do you know the equation of the path? No If so, are you sure that the bounded integral is zero YES Merged post follows: Consecutive posts merged Knowing what path would certainly be helpful as well. in the article ( arxiv.org/abs/0907.1321v1) says: "Note also that the left hand side of the equation (10) vanishes upon a line integration over a closed path along the compact internal space."
the tree Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 i need to evaluate [math](A'e^{nA})'[/math],where [math]A=kte |\phi|[/math],with [math]\phi[/math] in the article ( arxiv.org/abs/0907.1321v1) says: "Note also that the left hand side of the equation (10) vanishes upon a line integration over a closed path along the compact internal space." But the LHS of equation 10 in that article is [imath]\nabla \cdot (W^\zeta \nabla W)[/imath].
timo Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 But the LHS of equation 10 in that article is [imath]\nabla \cdot (W^\zeta \nabla W)[/imath]. In which case "gradient field" is the term you want to look up. The vanishing of the integral over any closed path is a property of a gradient field.
Amr Morsi Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 If W is only a function of phi, then it will turn to something like the formula written by alejandrito but divided by r^2*(sin(theta))^2........... Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedI think that "compact inetrnal space" defines the path.
the tree Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 But the LHS of equation 10 in that article is [imath]\nabla \cdot (W^\zeta \nabla W)[/imath]. In which case "gradient field" is the term you want to look up. The vanishing of the integral over any closed path is a property of a gradient field.I thought that'd apply in this, although I wasn't certain so I didn't want to say it outright. I'm still befuddled as to how it's connected to the expression presented in the OP.
alejandrito20 Posted April 5, 2010 Author Posted April 5, 2010 In which case "gradient field" is the term you want to look up. The vanishing of the integral over any closed path is a property of a gradient field. but, i read that : If A = grad F,The line integral over a gradient field is equal to the difference between the values of the potential function at the end-points ...the integral round a closed curve has the value zero... i think that [math]\oint \nabla W \cdot dr=0[/math] but [math]\oint \nabla \cdot (W^\zeta \nabla W) dr[/math], with z a number, ¿is zero too???????
Amr Morsi Posted April 5, 2010 Posted April 5, 2010 The former integral you introduced in the first post gets vanished. Just substitute with phi1=phi+pi and integrate from phi1=0 to phi1=2pi. The derivative will cancel out with the integration. Or, you may use the definition you posted before in another thread: [math] \frac{d^2|\phi|}{d\phi^2}=2(\delta(\phi)-\delta(\pi-\phi)) [/math]
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