NotationsThe most commonly used differential operator is the action of taking the derivative itself. Common notations for this operator include:
First derivatives are signified as above, but when taking higher, n-th derivatives, the following alterations are useful: The D notation's use and creation is credited to Oliver Heaviside, who considered differential operators of the form in his study of differential equations. One of the most frequently seen differential operators is the Laplacian operator, defined by Another differential operator is the Θ operator, defined by This is sometimes also called the homogeneity operator, because its eigenfunctions are the monomials in z: In n variables the homogeneity operator is given by As in one variable, the eigenspaces of Θ are the spaces of homogeneous polynomials. Adjoint of an operator
Given a linear differential operator the adjoint of this operator is defined as the operator T * such that where the notation Formal adjoint in one variableIn the functional space of square integrable functions, the scalar product is defined by If one moreover adds the condition that f or g vanishes for This formula does not explicitly depend on the definition of the scalar product. It is therefore sometimes chosen as a definition of the adjoint operator. When T * is defined according to this formula, it is called the formal adjoint of T. A (formally) self-adjoint operator is an operator equal to its own (formal) adjoint. Several variablesIf Ω is a domain in Rn, and P a differential operator on Ω, then the adjoint of P is defined in L2(Ω) by duality in the analogous manner: for all smooth L2 functions f, g. Since smooth functions are dense in L2, this defines the adjoint on a dense subset of L2: P* is a densely-defined operator. ExampleThe Sturm-Liouville operator is a well-known example of formal self-adjoint operator. This second order linear differential operators L can be written in the form This property can be proven using the formal adjoint definition above. This operator is central to Sturm-Liouville theory where the eigenfunctions (analogues to eigenvectors) of this operator are considered. Properties of differential operatorsDifferentiation is linear, i.e., where f and g are functions, and a is a constant. Any polynomial in D with function coefficients is also a differential operator. We may also compose differential operators by the rule Some care is then required: firstly any function coefficients in the operator D2 must be differentiable as many times as the application of D1 requires. To get a ring of such operators we must assume derivatives of all orders of the coefficients used. Secondly, this ring will not be commutative: an operator gD isn't the same in general as Dg. In fact we have for example the relation basic in quantum mechanics: The subring of operators that are polynomials in D with constant coefficients is, by contrast, commutative. It can be characterised another way: it consists of the translation-invariant operators. The differential operators also obey the shift theorem. Several variablesThe same constructions can be carried out with partial derivatives, differentiation with respect to different variables giving rise to operators that commute (see symmetry of second derivatives). Coordinate-independent description and relation to commutative algebraIn differential geometry and algebraic geometry it is often convenient to have a coordinate-independent description of differential operators between two vector bundles. Let E and F be two vector bundles over a manifold M. An such that where This just means that for a given sections s of E, the value of P(s) at a point An equivalent, but purely algebraic description of linear differential operators is as follows: an Here the bracket This characterization of linear differential operators shows that they are particular mappings between modules over a commutative algebra, allowing the concept to be seen as a part of commutative algebra. Examples
See also
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