Paper 3, Section II, 15A

Methods | Part IB, 2009

A function g(r)g(r) is chosen to make the integral

abf(r,g,g)dr\int_{a}^{b} f\left(r, g, g^{\prime}\right) d r

stationary, subject to given values of g(a)g(a) and g(b)g(b). Find the Euler-Lagrange equation for g(r).g(r) .

In a certain three-dimensional electrostatics problem the potential ϕ\phi depends only on the radial coordinate rr, and the energy functional of ϕ\phi is

E[ϕ]=2πR1R2[12(dϕdr)2+12λ2ϕ2]r2dr\mathcal{E}[\phi]=2 \pi \int_{R_{1}}^{R_{2}}\left[\frac{1}{2}\left(\frac{d \phi}{d r}\right)^{2}+\frac{1}{2 \lambda^{2}} \phi^{2}\right] r^{2} d r

where λ\lambda is a parameter. Show that the Euler-Lagrange equation associated with minimizing the energy E\mathcal{E} is equivalent to

1rd2(rϕ)dr21λ2ϕ=0\frac{1}{r} \frac{d^{2}(r \phi)}{d r^{2}}-\frac{1}{\lambda^{2}} \phi=0

Find the general solution of this equation, and the solution for the region R1rR2R_{1} \leqslant r \leqslant R_{2} which satisfies ϕ(R1)=ϕ1\phi\left(R_{1}\right)=\phi_{1} and ϕ(R2)=0\phi\left(R_{2}\right)=0.

Consider an annular region in two dimensions, where the potential is a function of the radial coordinate rr only. Write down the equivalent expression for the energy functional E\mathcal{E} above, in cylindrical polar coordinates, and derive the equivalent of (1).

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