Prolate spheroidal wave function
In mathematics, the prolate spheroidal wave functions are a set of functions derived by timelimiting and lowpassing, and a second timelimit operation. Let denote the time truncation operator, such that iff x is timelimited within . Similarly, let denote an ideal low-pass filtering operator, such that iff x is bandlimited within . The operator turns out to be linear, bounded and self-adjoint. For we denote with the n-th eigenfunction, defined as
where are the associated eigenvalues. The timelimited functions are the Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions (PSWFs).
These functions are also encountered in a different context. When solving the Helmholtz equation, , by the method of separation of variables in prolate spheroidal coordinates, , with:
- and .
the solution can be written as the product of a radial spheroidal wavefunction and an angular spheroidal wavefunction by with .
The radial wavefunction satisfies the linear ordinary differential equation:
The eigenvalue of this Sturm-Liouville differential equation is fixed by the requirement that must be finite for .
The angular wavefunction satisfies the differential equation:
It is the same differential equation as in the case of the radial wavefunction. However, the range of the variable is different (in the radial wavefunction, ) in the angular wavefunction ).
For these two differential equations reduce to the equations satisfied by the associated Legendre polynomials. For , the angular spheroidal wavefunctions can be expanded as a series of Legendre functions.
Let us note that if one writes , the function satisfies the following linear ordinary differential equation:
which is known as the spheroidal wave equation. This auxiliary equation is used for instance by Stratton in his 1935 article.
There are different normalization schemes for spheroidal functions. A table of the different schemes can be found in Abramowitz and Stegun p. 758. Abramowitz and Stegun (and the present article) follow the notation of Flammer.
In the case of oblate spheroidal coordinates the solution of the Helmholtz equation yields oblate spheroidal wavefunctions.
Originally, the spheroidal wave functions were introduced by C. Niven in 1880 when studying the conduction of heat in an ellipsoid of revolution, which lead to a Helmholtz equation in spheroidal coordinates.
Prolate spheroidal wave functions whose domain is a (portion of) the surface of the unit sphere are more generally called "Slepian functions"[1] (see also Spectral concentration problem). These are of great utility in disciplines such as geodesy[2] or cosmology[3].
References
![]() | This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (April 2009) |
- ^ F. J. Simons, M. A. Wieczorek and F. A. Dahlen. Spatiospectral concentration on a sphere. SIAM Review, 2006, [http://dx.doi.org/10.1137/S0036144504445765 doi:10.1137/S0036144504445765
- ^ F. J. Simons and Dahlen, F. A. "Spherical Slepian functions and the polar gap in Geodesy". Geophysical Journal International, 2006, doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.2006.03065.x
- ^ Dahlen, F. A., and F. J. Simons. "Spectral estimation on a sphere in geophysics and cosmology". Geophysical Journal International, 2008, doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.2008.03854.x
- W. J. Thomson spheroidal Wave functions Computing in Science & Engineering p. 84, May-June 1999.
- I. Daubechies, "Ten Lectures on Wavelets"
- C. Niven On the Conduction of Heat in Ellipsoids of Revolution. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London, 171 p. 117 (1880)
- J. A. Stratton Spheroidal functions Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 21, 51 (1935)
- C. Flammer Spheroidal Wave Functions. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1957.
- J. Meixner and F. W. Schäfke, Mathieusche Funktionen und Sphäroidfunktionen. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1954.
- J. A. Stratton , P. M. Morse, J. L. Chu, J. D. C. Little, and F. J. Corbató, Spheroidal Wave Functions. New York: Wiley, 1956.
- M. Abramowitz and I. Stegun Handbook of Mathematical Functions pp. 751-759 (Dover, New York, 1972)
- Slepian, D.; Pollak, H.O. Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions, Fourier Analysis and Uncertainty - I Bell System Technical Journal 40 (1961)
- Landau, H.J.; Pollak, H.O. Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions, Fourier Analysis and Uncertainty - II Bell System Technical Journal 40 (1961)
- Landau, H.J.; Pollak, H.O. Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions, Fourier Analysis and Uncertainty -- III: The Dimension of the Space of Essentially Time- and Band-Limited Signals Bell System Technical Journal 41 (1962)
- Slepian, David Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions, Fourier Analysis and Uncertainty - IV: Extensions to Many Dimensions; Generalized Prolate Spheroidal Functions Bell System Technical Journal 43 (1964)
- Slepian, D. Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions, Fourier Analysis, and Uncertainty - V: The Discrete Case Bell System Technical Journal 57 (1978)
- F. Sleator Studies in Radar Cross-Sections -- XLIX. Diffraction and scattering by regular bodies III: the prolate spheroid (1964)
- Slepian, David; Sonnenblick, Estelle Eigenvalues Associated with Prolate Spheroidal Wave Functions of Zero Order Bell System Technical Journal 44 (1965)
- H. E. Hunter Tables of prolate spheroidal functions for m=0: Volume I. (1965)
- H. E. Hunter Tables of prolate spheroidal functions for m=0 : Volume II. (1965)
- R. V. Baier, A. L. Van Buren, S. Hanish, B. J. King - Spheroidal Wave Functions: Their Use and Evaluation The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 48, pp. 102-102 (1970)
- B. J. King; R. V. Baier; S Hanish A Fortran Computer Program for Calculating the Prolate Spheroidal Radial Functions of the First and Second Kind and Their First Derivatives. (1970)
- B. J. Patz; A. L. VanBuren A FORTRAN Computer Program for Calculating the Prolate Spheroidal Angular Functions of the First Kind. (1981)
- P. E. Falloon (2002) Thesis on numerical computation of spheroidal functions University of Western Australia
External links
- MathWorld Spheroidal Wave functions
- MathWorld Prolate Spheroidal Wave Function
- MathWorld Oblate Spheroidal Wave function