The divergence of a Vector Field
is given by
 |
(1) |
Define
 |
(2) |
Then in arbitrary orthogonal Curvilinear Coordinates,
![\begin{displaymath}
{\rm div}(F) \equiv \nabla \cdot {\bf F} \equiv {1\over h_1h...
...h_3h_1F_2) + {\partial \over \partial u_3}(h_1h_2F_3)}\right].
\end{displaymath}](d2_1068.gif) |
(3) |
If
, then the field is said to be a Divergenceless Field. For divergence in individual
coordinate systems, see Curvilinear Coordinates.
 |
(4) |
The divergence of a Tensor
is
 |
(5) |
where
is the Covariant Derivative and
is the Comma Derivative. Expanding the terms gives
See also Curl, Curl Theorem, Gradient, Green's Theorem, Divergence Theorem,
Vector Derivative
References
Arfken, G. ``Divergence,
.'' §1.7 in
Mathematical Methods for Physicists, 3rd ed. Orlando, FL: Academic Press, pp. 37-42, 1985.
© 1996-9 Eric W. Weisstein
1999-05-24