Balayage

This article is about mathematics. It is not to be confused with the hair painting technique.

Balayage is a French word meaning scanning or sweeping.

In potential theory, a mathematical discipline, balayage is a method devised by Henri Poincaré for reconstructing a harmonic function in a domain from its values on the boundary of the domain.[1]

In modern terms, the balayage operator maps a measure μ on a closed domain D to a measure ν on the boundary D, so that the Newtonian potentials of μ and ν coincide outside D. The procedure is called balayage since the mass is "swept out" from D onto the boundary.

For x in D, the balayage of δx yields the harmonic measure νx corresponding to x. Then the value of a harmonic function f at x is equal to

References

  1. Solomentsev, E.D. (2001), "Balayage method", in Hazewinkel, Michiel, Encyclopedia of Mathematics, Springer, ISBN 978-1-55608-010-4


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.