Zonal spherical harmonics

In the mathematical study of rotational symmetry, the zonal spherical harmonics are special spherical harmonics that are invariant under the rotation through a particular fixed axis. The zonal spherical functions are a broad extension of the notion of zonal spherical harmonics to allow for a more general symmetry group.

On the two-dimensional sphere, the unique zonal spherical harmonic of degree ℓ invariant under rotations fixing the north pole is represented in spherical coordinates by

where P is a Legendre polynomial of degree . The general zonal spherical harmonic of degree ℓ is denoted by , where x is a point on the sphere representing the fixed axis, and y is the variable of the function. This can be obtained by rotation of the basic zonal harmonic

In n-dimensional Euclidean space, zonal spherical harmonics are defined as follows. Let x be a point on the (n−1)-sphere. Define to be the dual representation of the linear functional

in the finite-dimensional Hilbert space H of spherical harmonics of degree ℓ. In other words, the following reproducing property holds:
for all YH. The integral is taken with respect to the invariant probability measure.

Relationship with harmonic potentials edit

The zonal harmonics appear naturally as coefficients of the Poisson kernel for the unit ball in Rn: for x and y unit vectors,

 
where   is the surface area of the (n-1)-dimensional sphere. They are also related to the Newton kernel via
 
where x,yRn and the constants cn,k are given by
 

The coefficients of the Taylor series of the Newton kernel (with suitable normalization) are precisely the ultraspherical polynomials. Thus, the zonal spherical harmonics can be expressed as follows. If α = (n−2)/2, then

 
where cn, are the constants above and   is the ultraspherical polynomial of degree ℓ.

Properties edit

  • The zonal spherical harmonics are rotationally invariant, meaning that
     
    for every orthogonal transformation R. Conversely, any function f(x,y) on Sn−1×Sn−1 that is a spherical harmonic in y for each fixed x, and that satisfies this invariance property, is a constant multiple of the degree zonal harmonic.
  • If Y1, ..., Yd is an orthonormal basis of H, then
     
  • Evaluating at x = y gives
     

References edit

  • Stein, Elias; Weiss, Guido (1971), Introduction to Fourier Analysis on Euclidean Spaces, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-08078-9.