language-icon Old Web
English
Sign In

Dirichlet's energy

In mathematics, the Dirichlet energy is a measure of how variable a function is. More abstractly, it is a quadratic functional on the Sobolev space H1. The Dirichlet energy is intimately connected to Laplace's equation and is named after the German mathematician Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet. In mathematics, the Dirichlet energy is a measure of how variable a function is. More abstractly, it is a quadratic functional on the Sobolev space H1. The Dirichlet energy is intimately connected to Laplace's equation and is named after the German mathematician Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet. Given an open set Ω ⊆ Rn and a function u : Ω → R the Dirichlet energy of the function u is the real number where ∇u : Ω → Rn denotes the gradient vector field of the function u. Since it is the integral of a non-negative quantity, the Dirichlet energy is itself non-negative, i.e. E ≥ 0 for every function u. Solving Laplace's equation − Δ u ( x ) = 0 {displaystyle -Delta u(x)=0} for all x ∈ Ω {displaystyle xin Omega } , subject to appropriate boundary conditions, is equivalent to solving the variational problem of finding a function u that satisfies the boundary conditions and has minimal Dirichlet energy. Such a solution is called a harmonic function and such solutions are the topic of study in potential theory.

[ "Dirichlet boundary condition", "Dirichlet distribution", "Dirichlet problem", "Dirichlet eta function", "Dirichlet space", "Class number formula", "General Dirichlet series", "Generalized Dirichlet distribution" ]
Parent Topic
Child Topic
    No Parent Topic