Revision as of 03:09, 28 June 2008 by imported>Paul Wormer
In vectoranalysis, the Helmholtz decomposition of a vector field on
is the writing of the vector field as a sum of two vector fields, one a divergence-free field and one a curl-free field. The decomposition is called after the German physicist Hermann von Helmholtz (1821 – 1894).
As a corollary follows that, in order to define a vector function on
uniquely, we must specify both its divergence and its curl at all points of space.
Mathematical formulation
A vector field F(r) with
can be written as follows:

where

Thus, the arbitrary field F(r) can be decomposed in a part that is divergence-free,
, and a part that is curl-free,
.
Proof of decomposition
The decomposition is formulated in r-space. By a Fourier transformation the decomposition may be formulated in k-space. This is advantageous because differentiations in r-space become multiplications in k-space. We will show that divergence in r-space becomes an inner product in k-space and a curl becomes a cross product. Thus, we define the mutually inverse Fourier transforms,

An arbitrary vector field in k-space can be decomposed in components parallel and perpendicular to k,


so that

Clearly,

Transforming back,

which satisfy the properties

Hence we have found the required decomposition.
Proof of Corollary
(To be continued)