9—Vector Calculus 1 2689.9 Gravitational Potential
The gravitational potential is that functionV for which
~g=−∇V (36)That such a function evenexistsis not instantly obvious, but it is a consequence of the second of the two defining
equations ( 32 ). If you grant that, then you can get an immediate equation forV by substituting it into the first
of ( 32 ).
∇.~g=−∇.∇V =− 4 πGρ, or ∇^2 V = 4πGρ (37)
This is a scalar equation instead of a vector equation, so it will often be easier to handle. Apply it to the same
example as above, the uniform spherical mass.
The Laplacian,∇^2 is the divergence of the gradient, so to express it in spherical coordinates, combine
Eqs. ( 24 ) and ( 27 ).
∇^2 V =
1
r^2∂
∂r(
r^2∂V
∂r)
+
1
r^2 sinθ∂
∂θ(
sinθ∂V
∂θ)
+
1
r^2 sin^2 θ∂^2 V
∂φ^2(38)
Because the mass is spherical it doesn’t change no matter how you rotate it so the same thing holds for
the solution,V(r). Use this spherical coordinate representation of∇^2 and for this case theθandφderivatives
vanish.
1
r^2
d
dr(
r^2dV
dr)
= 4πGρ(r) (39)I changed from∂todbecause there’s now only one independent variable. Just as with Eq. ( 34 ) I’ll divide this
into two cases, inside and outside.
Outside:1
r^2d
dr(
r^2dV
dr)
= 0, so r^2dV
dr=C
Continue solving this and you have
dV
dr=
C
r^2−→V(r) =−C
r+D (r > R) (40)