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Divergence

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Oleg Alexandrov (talk | contribs) at 06:05, 26 December 2004 (minor fixes. Should one have a period at the end of formulas which are at the end of a sentence? A picture of a vector field and another one of its divergence would be very nice.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In vector calculus, the divergence is an operator that measures a vector field's tendency to originate from or converge upon a given point. For instance, for a vector field that denotes the velocity of water flowing in a draining bathtub, the divergence would have a negative value over the drain because the water vanishes there (if we only consider two dimensions); away from the drain the divergence would be zero, since there are no other sinks or sources.

A vector field which has zero divergence everywhere is called solenoidal.

Definition

Let x, y, z be a system of Cartesian coordinates on a 3-dimensional Euclidean space, and let ijk be the corresponding basis of unit vectors.

The divergence of a continuously differentiable vector field

F = Fx i + Fy j + Fz k

is defined to be the scalar-valued function

Another common notation for the divergence is File:Del.gif·F, a convenient mnemonic, where the dot denotes something just reminiscent of the dot product: take the components of File:Del.gif (see del), apply them to the components of F, and sum the results.

Physical interpretation

In physical terms, the divergence of a vector field is the extent to which the vector field flow behaves like a source or a sink at a given point. Indeed, an alternative, but logically equivalent definition, gives the divergence as the derivative of the net flow of the vector field across the surface of a small sphere relative to the volume of the sphere. To wit,

where S(r) denotes the sphere of radius r about a point p in R3, and the integral is a surface integral taken with respect to N, the normal to that sphere.

In light of the physical interpretation, a vector field with constant zero divergence is called incompressible – in this case, no net flow can occur across any closed surface.

The intuition that the sum of all sources minus the sum of all sinks should give the net flow outwards of a region is made precise by the divergence theorem.

Facts

The following facts can all be derived from the ordinary differentiation rules of calculus. Most importantly, the divergence is a linear operator, i.e.

for all vector fields F and G and all real numbers a and b.

There is a product rule of the following type: if φ is a scalar valued function and F is a vector field, then

or in more suggestive notation

Another product rule for the cross product of two vector fields F and G in three dimensions involves the curl and reads as follows:

The Laplacian of a scalar field is the divergence of the field's gradient.

The divergence of the curl of any vector field (in three dimensions) is constant and equal to zero. Conversely, if you have a vector field F with zero divergence defined on a ball in R3, say, then there exists some vector field G on the ball with F = curl(G). For regions in R3 more complicated then balls, this latter statement might not be true anymore. Indeed, the degree of failure of the truth of the statement, measured by the homology of the chain complex

(where the first map is the gradient, the second is the curl, the third is the divergence) serves as a nice quantification of the complicatedness of the underlying region U. These are the beginnings and main motivations of de Rham cohomology.

See also