D'Alembert operator
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In special relativity, electromagnetism and wave theory, the d'Alembert operator Δ, also called the d'Alembertian or the wave operator, is the Laplace operator of Minkowski space and other solutions of the Einstein equation. In Minkowski space in standard coordinates (t, x, y, z) it has the form
where is the three dimensional Laplacian, η00 = 1, η0i = 0 and ηij = − δij for i,j = 1 to 3; η being the Minkowski metric, and δ being the Kronecker delta. Note that μ and ν range from 0 to 3, whereas i and j range from 1 to 3: see Einstein notation. The sign of these expressions depends on the sign convention used for the Minkowski metric.
Lorentz transformations leave the metric invariant, thus the above coordinate expressions remain valid for the standard coordinates in every inertial frame.
[edit] Alternate notations
In physics the symbol or is usually used for the d'Alembertian: the four sides of the box representing the four dimensions of space-time. Sometimes is used to represent the four-dimensional Levi-Civita covariant derivative. The symbol is then used to represent the space derivatives, but this is coordinate chart dependent. In such case, the three sides of the triangular nabla may be taken to represent the three dimensions of space.
Another way to write the d'Alembertian in flat standard coordinates is . The notation is useful in quantum field theory where partial derivatives are usually indexed: so the lack of an index with the squared partial derivative signals the presence of the D'Alembertian.
[edit] Applications
The continuity equation for the four-current J = (ρc, j)
can be written
The Klein-Gordon equation would look like
- .
A wave equation for the electromagnetic field is
where A is the vector potential.