In mathematics and physics, the heat equation is a certain partial differential equation. Solutions of the heat equation are sometimes known as caloric functions. The theory of the heat equation was first developed by Joseph Fourier in 1822 for the purpose of modeling how a quantity such as heat diffuses through a given region.
As the prototypical parabolic partial differential equation, the heat equation is among the most widely studied topics in pure mathematics, and its analysis is regarded as fundamental to the broader field of partial differential equations. The heat equation can also be considered on Riemannian manifolds, leading to many geometric applications. Following work of Subbaramiah Minakshisundaram and Åke Pleijel, the heat equation is closely related with spectral geometry. A seminal nonlinear variant of the heat equation was introduced to differential geometry by James Eells and Joseph Sampson in 1964, inspiring the introduction of the Ricci flow by Richard Hamilton in 1982 and culminating in the proof of the Poincaré conjecture by Grigori Perelman in 2003. Certain solutions of the heat equation known as heat kernels provide subtle information about the region on which they are defined, as exemplified through their application to the Atiyah–Singer index theorem.[1]
The heat equation, along with variants thereof, is also important in many fields of science and applied mathematics. In probability theory, the heat equation is connected with the study of random walks and Brownian motion via the Fokker–Planck equation. The Black–Scholes equation of financial mathematics is a small variant of the heat equation, and the Schrödinger equation of quantum mechanics can be regarded as a heat equation in imaginary time. In image analysis, the heat equation is sometimes used to resolve pixelation and to identify edges. Following Robert Richtmyer and John von Neumann's introduction of "artificial viscosity" methods, solutions of heat equations have been useful in the mathematical formulation of hydrodynamical shocks. Solutions of the heat equation have also been given much attention in the numerical analysis literature, beginning in the 1950s with work of Jim Douglas, D.W. Peaceman, and Henry Rachford Jr.
In mathematics, if given an open subset of and a subinterval of, one says that a function is a solution of the heat equation if
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=
\partial2u | ||||||||
|
+ … +
\partial2u | ||||||||
|
,
In physics and engineering contexts, especially in the context of diffusion through a medium, it is more common to fix a Cartesian coordinate system and then to consider the specific case of a function of three spatial variables and time variable . One then says that is a solution of the heat equation if
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=\alpha\left(
\partial2u | + | |
\partialx2 |
\partial2u | + | |
\partialy2 |
\partial2u | |
\partialz2 |
\right)
In mathematics as well as in physics and engineering, it is common to use Newton's notation for time derivatives, so that
u |
Note also that the ability to use either or to denote the Laplacian, without explicit reference to the spatial variables, is a reflection of the fact that the Laplacian is independent of the choice of coordinate system. In mathematical terms, one would say that the Laplacian is "translationally and rotationally invariant." In fact, it is (loosely speaking) the simplest differential operator which has these symmetries. This can be taken as a significant (and purely mathematical) justification of the use of the Laplacian and of the heat equation in modeling any physical phenomena which are homogeneous and isotropic, of which heat diffusion is a principal example.
The "diffusivity constant" is often not present in mathematical studies of the heat equation, while its value can be very important in engineering. This is not a major difference, for the following reason. Let be a function with
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=\alpha\Deltau.
v(t,x)=u(t/\alpha,x)
Since
\alpha>0
v
v(t,x)=u(t,\alpha1/2x)
v
Informally, the Laplacian operator gives the difference between the average value of a function in the neighborhood of a point, and its value at that point. Thus, if is the temperature, tells whether (and by how much) the material surrounding each point is hotter or colder, on the average, than the material at that point.
By the second law of thermodynamics, heat will flow from hotter bodies to adjacent colder bodies, in proportion to the difference of temperature and of the thermal conductivity of the material between them. When heat flows into (respectively, out of) a material, its temperature increases (respectively, decreases), in proportion to the amount of heat divided by the amount (mass) of material, with a proportionality factor called the specific heat capacity of the material.
By the combination of these observations, the heat equation says the rate
u |
The first half of the above physical thinking can be put into a mathematical form. The key is that, for any fixed, one has
\begin{align} u(x)(0)&=u(x)\\ u(x)'(0)&=0\\ u(x)''(0)&=
1 | |
n |
\Deltau(x) \end{align}
u(x)(r)=
1 | |
\omegan-1rn-1 |
\int\{y:|x-y|=r\
Following this observation, one may interpret the heat equation as imposing an infinitesimal averaging of a function. Given a solution of the heat equation, the value of for a small positive value of may be approximated as times the average value of the function over a sphere of very small radius centered at .
The heat equation implies that peaks (local maxima) of
u
Ax+By+Cz+D
u |
A more subtle consequence is the maximum principle, that says that the maximum value of
u
R
R
R
R
R
Another interesting property is that even if
u
u0
u1
u
u0
u1
If a certain amount of heat is suddenly applied to a point in the medium, it will spread out in all directions in the form of a diffusion wave. Unlike the elastic and electromagnetic waves, the speed of a diffusion wave drops with time: as it spreads over a larger region, the temperature gradient decreases, and therefore the heat flow decreases too.
For heat flow, the heat equation follows from the physical laws of conduction of heat and conservation of energy .
By Fourier's law for an isotropic medium, the rate of flow of heat energy per unit area through a surface is proportional to the negative temperature gradient across it:
q=-k\nablau
k
u=u(x,t)
q=q(x,t)
x
t
If the medium is a thin rod of uniform section and material, the position is a single coordinate
x
x
q=q(t,x)
x
q=-k
\partialu | |
\partialx |
Let
Q=Q(x,t)
\partialQ/\partialt
\partialu/\partialt
\partialQ | |
\partialt |
=c\rho
\partialu | |
\partialt |
c
\rho
Applying the law of conservation of energy to a small element of the medium centered at
x
x
\partialQ | |
\partialt |
=-
\partialq | |
\partialx |
From the above equations it follows that
\partialu | |
\partialt |
= -
1 | |
c\rho |
\partialq | |
\partialx |
= -
1 | |
c\rho |
\partial | |
\partialx |
\left(-k
\partialu | |
\partialx |
\right) =
k | |
c\rho |
\partial2u | |
\partialx2 |
\alpha=
k | |
c\rho |
This quantity is called the thermal diffusivity of the medium.
An additional term may be introduced into the equation to account for radiative loss of heat. According to the Stefan–Boltzmann law, this term is
\mu\left(u4-v4\right)
v=v(x,t)
\mu
\partialQ | |
\partialt |
=-
\partialq | |
\partialx |
-\mu\left(u4-v4\right)
u
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=
k | |
c\rho |
\partial2u | |
\partialx2 |
-
\mu | |
c\rho |
\left(u4-v4\right).
Note that the state equation, given by the first law of thermodynamics (i.e. conservation of energy), is written in the following form (assuming no mass transfer or radiation). This form is more general and particularly useful to recognize which property (e.g. cp or
\rho
\rhocp
\partialT | |
\partialt |
-\nabla ⋅ \left(k\nablaT\right)=
q |
V
q |
V
In the special cases of propagation of heat in an isotropic and homogeneous medium in a 3-dimensional space, this equation is
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=\alpha\nabla2u= \alpha\left(
\partial2u | + | |
\partialx2 |
\partial2u | + | |
\partialy2 |
\partial2u | |
\partialz2 |
\right)
=\alpha\left(uxx+uyy+uzz\right)
u=u(x,y,z,t)
\tfrac{\partialu}{\partialt}
uxx
uyy
uzz
x
y
z
\alpha\equiv\tfrac{k}{cp\rho}
k
cp
\rho
The heat equation is a consequence of Fourier's law of conduction (see heat conduction).
If the medium is not the whole space, in order to solve the heat equation uniquely we also need to specify boundary conditions for u. To determine uniqueness of solutions in the whole space it is necessary to assume additional conditions, for example an exponential bound on the growth of solutions or a sign condition (nonnegative solutions are unique by a result of David Widder).[2]
Solutions of the heat equation are characterized by a gradual smoothing of the initial temperature distribution by the flow of heat from warmer to colder areas of an object. Generally, many different states and starting conditions will tend toward the same stable equilibrium. As a consequence, to reverse the solution and conclude something about earlier times or initial conditions from the present heat distribution is very inaccurate except over the shortest of time periods.
The heat equation is the prototypical example of a parabolic partial differential equation.
Using the Laplace operator, the heat equation can be simplified, and generalized to similar equations over spaces of arbitrary number of dimensions, as
ut=\alpha\nabla2u=\alpha\Deltau,
The heat equation governs heat diffusion, as well as other diffusive processes, such as particle diffusion or the propagation of action potential in nerve cells. Although they are not diffusive in nature, some quantum mechanics problems are also governed by a mathematical analog of the heat equation (see below). It also can be used to model some phenomena arising in finance, like the Black–Scholes or the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck processes. The equation, and various non-linear analogues, has also been used in image analysis.
The heat equation is, technically, in violation of special relativity, because its solutions involve instantaneous propagation of a disturbance. The part of the disturbance outside the forward light cone can usually be safely neglected, but if it is necessary to develop a reasonable speed for the transmission of heat, a hyperbolic problem should be considered instead – like a partial differential equation involving a second-order time derivative. Some models of nonlinear heat conduction (which are also parabolic equations) have solutions with finite heat transmission speed.[3]
The function u above represents temperature of a body. Alternatively, it is sometimes convenient to change units and represent u as the heat density of a medium. Since heat density is proportional to temperature in a homogeneous medium, the heat equation is still obeyed in the new units.
Suppose that a body obeys the heat equation and, in addition, generates its own heat per unit volume (e.g., in watts/litre - W/L) at a rate given by a known function q varying in space and time.[4] Then the heat per unit volume u satisfies an equation
1 | |
\alpha |
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=\left(
\partial2u | |
\partialx2 |
+
\partial2u | |
\partialy2 |
+
\partial2u | |
\partialz2 |
\right)+
1 | |
k |
q.
For example, a tungsten light bulb filament generates heat, so it would have a positive nonzero value for q when turned on. While the light is turned off, the value of q for the tungsten filament would be zero.
The following solution technique for the heat equation was proposed by Joseph Fourier in his treatise Théorie analytique de la chaleur, published in 1822. Consider the heat equation for one space variable. This could be used to model heat conduction in a rod. The equation iswhere u = u(x, t) is a function of two variables x and t. Here
We assume the initial conditionwhere the function f is given, and the boundary conditions
Let us attempt to find a solution of that is not identically zero satisfying the boundary conditions but with the following property: u is a product in which the dependence of u on x, t is separated, that is:
This solution technique is called separation of variables. Substituting u back into equation,
T'(t) | |
\alphaT(t) |
=
X''(x) | |
X(x) |
.
Since the right hand side depends only on x and the left hand side only on t, both sides are equal to some constant value −λ. Thus:and
We will now show that nontrivial solutions for for values of λ ≤ 0 cannot occur:
This solves the heat equation in the special case that the dependence of u has the special form .
In general, the sum of solutions to that satisfy the boundary conditions also satisfies and . We can show that the solution to, and is given by
u(x,t)=
infty | |
\sum | |
n=1 |
Dn\sin\left(
n\pix | |
L |
\right)
| ||||
e |
Dn=
2 | |
L |
L | |
\int | |
0 |
f(x)\sin\left(
n\pix | |
L |
\right)dx.
The solution technique used above can be greatly extended to many other types of equations. The idea is that the operator uxx with the zero boundary conditions can be represented in terms of its eigenfunctions. This leads naturally to one of the basic ideas of the spectral theory of linear self-adjoint operators.
Consider the linear operator Δu = uxx. The infinite sequence of functions
en(x)=\sqrt{
2 | |
L |
\Deltaen=-
n2\pi2 | |
L2 |
en.
Moreover, any eigenfunction f of Δ with the boundary conditions f(0) = f(L) = 0 is of the form en for some n ≥ 1. The functions en for n ≥ 1 form an orthonormal sequence with respect to a certain inner product on the space of real-valued functions on [0, ''L'']. This means
\langleen,em\rangle=
L | |
\int | |
0 |
en(x)
* | |
e | |
m(x) |
dx=\deltamn
Finally, the sequence n ∈ N spans a dense linear subspace of L2((0, L)). This shows that in effect we have diagonalized the operator Δ.
In general, the study of heat conduction is based on several principles. Heat flow is a form of energy flow, and as such it is meaningful to speak of the time rate of flow of heat into a region of space.
q_t(V) &= - \int_ \mathbf(x) \cdot \mathbf(x) \, dS \\&= \int_ \mathbf(x) \cdot \nabla u (x) \cdot \mathbf(x) \, dS \\&= \int_V \sum_ \partial_ \bigl(a_(x) \partial_ u (x,t) \bigr)\,dx \end
Putting these equations together gives the general equation of heat flow:
\partialtu(x,t)=\kappa(x)\sumi,
\partial | |
xi |
l(ai(x)
\partial | |
xj |
u(x,t)r)
Remarks
\kappa=1/(\rhocp)
See also: Weierstrass transform. A fundamental solution, also called a heat kernel, is a solution of the heat equation corresponding to the initial condition of an initial point source of heat at a known position. These can be used to find a general solution of the heat equation over certain domains; see, for instance, for an introductory treatment.
In one variable, the Green's function is a solution of the initial value problem (by Duhamel's principle, equivalent to the definition of Green's function as one with a delta function as solution to the first equation)
\begin{cases} ut(x,t)-kuxx(x,t)=0&(x,t)\in\R x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=\delta(x)& \end{cases}
\delta
\Phi(x,t)= | 1 |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
One can obtain the general solution of the one variable heat equation with initial condition u(x, 0) = g(x) for −∞ < x < ∞ and 0 < t < ∞ by applying a convolution:
u(x,t)=\int\Phi(x-y,t)g(y)dy.
In several spatial variables, the fundamental solution solves the analogous problem
\begin{cases} ut(x,t)-k
nu | |
\sum | |
xixi |
(x,t)=0&(x,t)\in\Rn x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=\delta(x) \end{cases}
The n-variable fundamental solution is the product of the fundamental solutions in each variable; i.e.,
\Phi(x,t)=\Phi(x1,t)\Phi(x2,t) … \Phi(xn,t)=
1 | |
\sqrt{(4\pikt)n |
The general solution of the heat equation on Rn is then obtained by a convolution, so that to solve the initial value problem with u(x, 0) = g(x), one has
u(x,t)=
\int | |
\Rn |
\Phi(x-y,t)g(y)dy.
The general problem on a domain Ω in Rn is
\begin{cases} ut(x,t)-k
nu | |
\sum | |
xixi |
(x,t)=0&(x,t)\in\Omega x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=g(x)&x\in\Omega \end{cases}
A variety of elementary Green's function solutions in one-dimension are recorded here; many others are available elsewhere.[5] In some of these, the spatial domain is (−∞,∞). In others, it is the semi-infinite interval (0,∞) with either Neumann or Dirichlet boundary conditions. One further variation is that some of these solve the inhomogeneous equation
ut=kuxx+f.
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx&(x,t)\in\R x (0,infty)\ u(x,0)=g(x)&Initialcondition \end{cases}
u(x,t)=
1 | |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
Comment. This solution is the convolution with respect to the variable x of the fundamental solution
\Phi(x,t):=
1 | |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
Therefore, according to the general properties of the convolution with respect to differentiation, u = g ∗ Φ is a solution of the same heat equation, for
\left(\partialt-k\partial
2 | |
x |
\right)(\Phi*g)=\left[\left(\partialt-k\partial
2 | |
x |
\right)\Phi\right]*g=0.
Moreover,
\Phi(x,t)= | 1 |
\sqrt{t |
infty | |
\int | |
-infty |
\Phi(x,t)dx=1,
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx&(x,t)\in[0,infty) x (0,infty)\ u(x,0)=g(x)&IC\\ u(0,t)=0&BC \end{cases}
u(x,t)= | 1 |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
Comment. This solution is obtained from the preceding formula as applied to the data g(x) suitably extended to R, so as to be an odd function, that is, letting g(−x) := −g(x) for all x. Correspondingly, the solution of the initial value problem on (−∞,∞) is an odd function with respect to the variable x for all values of t, and in particular it satisfies the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions u(0, t) = 0.The Green's function number of this solution is X10.
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx&(x,t)\in[0,infty) x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=g(x)&IC\\ ux(0,t)=0&BC \end{cases}
u(x,t)= | 1 |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
Comment. This solution is obtained from the first solution formula as applied to the data g(x) suitably extended to R so as to be an even function, that is, letting g(−x) := g(x) for all x. Correspondingly, the solution of the initial value problem on R is an even function with respect to the variable x for all values of t > 0, and in particular, being smooth, it satisfies the homogeneous Neumann boundary conditions ux(0, t) = 0. The Green's function number of this solution is X20.
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx&(x,t)\in[0,infty) x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=0&IC\\ u(0,t)=h(t)&BC \end{cases}
t | |
u(x,t)=\int | |
0 |
x | |
\sqrt{4\pik(t-s)3 |
Comment. This solution is the convolution with respect to the variable t of
\psi(x,t):=-2k\partialx\Phi(x,t)=
x | |
\sqrt{4\pikt3 |
2 | |
\partial | |
x, |
\psi(x,t)= | 1 | \psi\left(1, |
x2 |
t | |
x2 |
\right)
infty | |
\int | |
0 |
\psi(x,t)dt=1,
Comment. This solution is the convolution in R2, that is with respect to both the variables x and t, of the fundamental solution
\Phi(x,t):=
1 | |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
\left(\partialt-k
2 | |
\partial | |
x |
\right)(\Phi*f)=f,
\left(\partialt-k
2 | |
\partial | |
x |
\right)\Phi=\delta,
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx+f(x,t)&(x,t)\in[0,infty) x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=0&IC\\ u(0,t)=0&BC \end{cases}
t | |
u(x,t)=\int | |
0 |
infty | |
\int | |
0 |
1 | |
\sqrt{4\pik(t-s) |
Comment. This solution is obtained from the preceding formula as applied to the data f(x, t) suitably extended to R × [0,∞), so as to be an odd function of the variable ''x'', that is, letting ''f''(−''x'', ''t'') := −''f''(''x'', ''t'') for all ''x'' and ''t''. Correspondingly, the solution of the inhomogeneous problem on (−∞,∞) is an odd function with respect to the variable ''x'' for all values of ''t'', and in particular it satisfies the homogeneous Dirichlet boundary conditions ''u''(0, ''t'') = 0. ; Problem on (0,∞) with homogeneous Neumann boundary conditions and initial conditions : : <math>\begin{cases} u_{t} = ku_{xx}+f(x,t) & (x, t) \in [0, \infty) \times (0, \infty) \\ u(x,0)=0 & \text{IC} \\ u_x(0,t)=0 & \text{BC} \end{cases} </math> : <math>u(x,t)=\int_{0}^{t}\int_{0}^{\infty} \frac{1}{\sqrt{4\pi k(t-s)}} \left(\exp\left(-\frac{(x-y)^2}{4k(t-s)}\right)+\exp\left(-\frac{(x+y)^2}{4k(t-s)}\right)\right) f(y,s)\,dy\,ds </math> ''Comment''. This solution is obtained from the first formula as applied to the data ''f''(''x'', ''t'') suitably extended to '''R''' × [0,∞), so as to be an even function of the variable ''x'', that is, letting ''f''(−''x'', ''t'') := ''f''(''x'', ''t'') for all ''x'' and ''t''. Correspondingly, the solution of the inhomogeneous problem on (−∞,∞) is an even function with respect to the variable ''x'' for all values of ''t'', and in particular, being a smooth function, it satisfies the homogeneous Neumann boundary conditions ''u<sub>x</sub>''(0, ''t'') = 0. ==== Examples ==== Since the heat equation is linear, solutions of other combinations of boundary conditions, inhomogeneous term, and initial conditions can be found by taking an appropriate [[linear combination]] of the above Green's function solutions.
For example, to solve
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx+f&(x,t)\in\R x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=g(x)&IC \end{cases}
\begin{cases}vt=kvxx+f,wt=kwxx&(x,t)\in\R x (0,infty)\ v(x,0)=0,w(x,0)=g(x)&IC \end{cases}
Similarly, to solve
\begin{cases} ut=kuxx+f&(x,t)\in[0,infty) x (0,infty)\\ u(x,0)=g(x)&IC\\ u(0,t)=h(t)&BC \end{cases}
\begin{cases}vt=kvxx+f,wt=kwxx,rt=krxx&(x,t)\in[0,infty) x (0,infty)\ v(x,0)=0, w(x,0)=g(x), r(x,0)=0&IC\ v(0,t)=0, w(0,t)=0, r(0,t)=h(t)&BC \end{cases}
Solutions of the heat equations
(\partialt-\Delta)u=0
\Deltau=0,
(\partialt-\Delta)u=0
(x,t)+Eλ\subsetdom(u)
u(x,t)= | λ |
4 |
\int | u(x-y,t-s) | |
Eλ |
|y|2 | |
s2 |
dsdy,
Eλ:=\{(y,s):\Phi(y,s)>λ\},
\Phi(x,t):=
| |||||
(4t\pi) | \exp\left(- |
|x|2 | |
4t |
\right).
diam(Eλ)=o(1)
The steady-state heat equation is by definition not dependent on time. In other words, it is assumed conditions exist such that:
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=0
This condition depends on the time constant and the amount of time passed since boundary conditions have been imposed. Thus, the condition is fulfilled in situations in which the time equilibrium constant is fast enough that the more complex time-dependent heat equation can be approximated by the steady-state case. Equivalently, the steady-state condition exists for all cases in which enough time has passed that the thermal field u no longer evolves in time.
In the steady-state case, a spatial thermal gradient may (or may not) exist, but if it does, it does not change in time. This equation therefore describes the end result in all thermal problems in which a source is switched on (for example, an engine started in an automobile), and enough time has passed for all permanent temperature gradients to establish themselves in space, after which these spatial gradients no longer change in time (as again, with an automobile in which the engine has been running for long enough). The other (trivial) solution is for all spatial temperature gradients to disappear as well, in which case the temperature become uniform in space, as well.
The equation is much simpler and can help to understand better the physics of the materials without focusing on the dynamic of the heat transport process. It is widely used for simple engineering problems assuming there is equilibrium of the temperature fields and heat transport, with time.
Steady-state condition:
\partialu | |
\partialt |
=0
The steady-state heat equation for a volume that contains a heat source (the inhomogeneous case), is the Poisson's equation:
-k\nabla2u=q
In electrostatics, this is equivalent to the case where the space under consideration contains an electrical charge.
The steady-state heat equation without a heat source within the volume (the homogeneous case) is the equation in electrostatics for a volume of free space that does not contain a charge. It is described by Laplace's equation:
\nabla2u=0
See main article: Diffusion equation.
One can model particle diffusion by an equation involving either:
In either case, one uses the heat equation
ct=D\Deltac,
Pt=D\DeltaP.
Both c and P are functions of position and time. D is the diffusion coefficient that controls the speed of the diffusive process, and is typically expressed in meters squared over second. If the diffusion coefficient D is not constant, but depends on the concentration c (or P in the second case), then one gets the nonlinear diffusion equation.
X
\begin{cases} dXt=\sqrt{2k} dBt\\ X0=0 \end{cases}
B
X
t
1 | |
\sqrt{4\pikt |
\begin{cases} ut(x,t)-kuxx(x,t)=0,&(x,t)\in\R x (0,+infty)\\ u(x,0)=\delta(x) \end{cases}
\delta
See main article: Schrödinger equation.
With a simple division, the Schrödinger equation for a single particle of mass m in the absence of any applied force field can be rewritten in the following way:
\psit=
i\hbar | |
2m |
\Delta\psi
This equation is formally similar to the particle diffusion equation, which one obtains through the following transformation:
\begin{align} c(R,t)&\to\psi(R,t)\\ D&\to
i\hbar | |
2m |
\end{align}
Applying this transformation to the expressions of the Green functions determined in the case of particle diffusion yields the Green functions of the Schrödinger equation, which in turn can be used to obtain the wave function at any time through an integral on the wave function at t = 0:
\psi(R,t)=\int\psi\left(R0,t=0\right)G\left(R-R0,t\right)
0 | |
dR | |
x |
0 | |
dR | |
y |
0, | |
dR | |
z |
G(R,t)=\left(
m | |
2\pii\hbart |
\right)3/2
| ||||
e |
.
Remark: this analogy between quantum mechanics and diffusion is a purely formal one. Physically, the evolution of the wave function satisfying Schrödinger's equation might have an origin other than diffusion.
A direct practical application of the heat equation, in conjunction with Fourier theory, in spherical coordinates, is the prediction of thermal transfer profiles and the measurement of the thermal diffusivity in polymers (Unsworth and Duarte). This dual theoretical-experimental method is applicable to rubber, various other polymeric materials of practical interest, and microfluids. These authors derived an expression for the temperature at the center of a sphere
TC-TS | |
T0-TS |
=2
infty | |
\sum | |
n=1 |
(-1)n+1\exp\left({-
n2\pi2\alphat | |
L2 |
The heat equation arises in the modeling of a number of phenomena and is often used in financial mathematics in the modeling of options. The Black–Scholes option pricing model's differential equation can be transformed into the heat equation allowing relatively easy solutions from a familiar body of mathematics. Many of the extensions to the simple option models do not have closed form solutions and thus must be solved numerically to obtain a modeled option price. The equation describing pressure diffusion in a porous medium is identical in form with the heat equation. Diffusion problems dealing with Dirichlet, Neumann and Robin boundary conditions have closed form analytic solutions .The heat equation is also widely used in image analysis and in machine-learning as the driving theory behind scale-space or graph Laplacian methods. The heat equation can be efficiently solved numerically using the implicit Crank–Nicolson method of . This method can be extended to many of the models with no closed form solution, see for instance .
An abstract form of heat equation on manifolds provides a major approach to the Atiyah–Singer index theorem, and has led to much further work on heat equations in Riemannian geometry.