next up previous contents index
Next: Complete Set of Commuting Up: The Helmholtz Equation Previous: Cartesian versus Polar Coordinates   Contents   Index


Degenerate Eigenvalues

Every eigenvalue of the eigenvalue equation

$\displaystyle -\nabla^2\psi = k^2\psi
$

is highly degenerate. In fact, each eigenvalue $ k^2$ is infinitely degenerate. This means that for one and the same eigenvalue $ k^2$ , there is an infinite set of eigenfunctions, namely,

$\displaystyle \{ e^{i(k_x x+k_yy)}\colon k^2_x+k^2_y = k^2\}
$

or

$\displaystyle \{ e^{ikr\cos (\alpha -\theta )}\colon \alpha\textrm{~is~a~constant}\}\,.
$

These solutions form a basis for the subspace of solutions to the Helmholtz equation

$\displaystyle (\nabla^2+k^2)\psi =0~~.
$

Any solution to this equation is a unique superposition of the basis elements. We shall refer to this subspace as the eigenspace of the (degenerate) eigenvalue $ k^2$ .

A matrix, and more generally an operator, is diagonal relative to its eigenvector basis. The Helmholtz operator $ -\nabla^2$ can, therefore, be viewed as an infinite diagonal matrix

$\displaystyle -\nabla^2 = \left[\begin{array}{ccc}
\ddots &&\\
&\boxed{\begin{...
...c}
k^2 &&0\\
&\ddots &\\
0 &&k^2\end{array}} &\\
&&\ddots\end{array}\right]
$

with degenerate eigenvalues $ k^2$ along the diagonal.

The question now is, how does one tell the difference between the eigenfunctions having the same eigenvalue $ k^2$ ? Physically one says that these eigenfunctions are plane waves propagating into different directions. However, one also would like to express the difference algebraically.


next up previous contents index
Next: Complete Set of Commuting Up: The Helmholtz Equation Previous: Cartesian versus Polar Coordinates   Contents   Index
Ulrich Gerlach 2007-04-05