Divergence
Divergence measures the distortion of a vector field.
Description
The divergence of a vector field given as F = <P(x,y), Q(x,y)> is calculated as:
The divergence of F given as <P(x,y,z), Q(x,y,z), R(x,y,z)> is calculated as:
Note that divergence returns a scalar value.
Properties
The divergence of the curl of a vector field is always 0.
Source-Free Fields
A vector field is source-free if there is zero divergence. This means that there are no sources (points where the field originates) or sinks (points where the field terminates). A consequence is that, for any closed circular path C, movement in is equal to movement out (flux is zero).
The last point leads to one definition of a source-free vector field:
This can be equivalently expressed as:
where Px = ∂P/∂x and Qy = ∂Q/∂y. Note furthermore that this equation can only be true if Px + Qy = 0, giving an even more succinct formulation.
If a vector field is source-free, there is at least one stream function g. If the field is given as F = <P(x,y), Q(x,y)>, then g must satisfy:
Conservative Fields
A vector field is conservative if it is path independent. There is necessarily at least one function f satisfying F = ∇f. In this case, divergence can be evaluated using the Laplace operator.
where fxx = ∂2f/∂x2 and fyy = ∂2f/∂y2, and
where fzz = ∂2f/∂z2.
