- Spin-weighted spherical harmonics
Spin-weighted spherical harmonics are generalizations of the standard
spherical harmonics and—like the usual spherical harmonics—are complex functions on the sphere. These harmonics are typically denoted by , where is the "spin weight", and and are akin to the usual parameters familiar from the standard spherical harmonics. The spin-weighted spherical harmonics can be derived from the standard spherical harmonics by application of spin raising and lowering operators. In particular, the spin-weighted spherical harmonics of spin weight are simply the standard spherical harmonics::Though these functions were first introduced by
Ezra T. Newman andRoger Penrose to describegravitational radiation [cite journal | title = Note on the Bondi-Metzner-Sachs Group | author = E. T. Newman and R. Penrose | journal = J. Math. Phys. | volume = 7 | number = 5 | pages = 863--870 | year = 1966 | month = May | publisher = American Institute of Physics | url = http://link.aip.org/link/?JMP/7/863/1 | doi = 10.1063/1.1931221] , they are quite general, and can be applied to other functions on a sphere.Origin
The spin-weighted harmonics—like their standard relatives—are functions on a sphere. We select a point on the sphere, and rotate the sphere about that point by some angle . By definition, a function with "spin weight s" transforms as .
Working in standard spherical coordinates, we can define a particular operator acting on a function as::This gives us another function of and . [The operator is effectively a
covariant derivative operator in the sphere.]An important property of the new function is that if had spin weight , has spin weight . Thus, the operator raises the spin weight of a function by 1. Similarly, we can define an operator which will lower the spin weight of a function by 1::
The spin-weighted spherical harmonics are then defined in terms of the usual
spherical harmonics as::::The functions then have the property of transforming with spin weight .Other important properties include the following:::
Orthogonality and completeness
The harmonics are orthogonal over the entire sphere::and satisfy the completeness relation:
Calculating
These harmonics can be explicitly calculated by several methods. The obvious recursion relation results from repeatedly applying the raising or lowering operators. Formulas for direct calculation were derived by Goldberg, et al. [cite journal | title = Spin-s Spherical Harmonics and ð | author = J. N. Goldberg and A. J. Macfarlane and E. T. Newman and F. Rohrlich and E. C. G. Sudarshan | journal = J. Math. Phys. | volume = 8 | number = 11 | pages = 2155--2161 | year = 1967 | month = November | doi = 10.1063/1.1705135 | publisher = American Institute of Physics | note = N.B.: Equations 2.11 and 3.1 seem to be off by a factor of (-1)^m | url = http://link.aip.org/link/?JMP/8/2155/1] . Note that their formulas use an old choice for the [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/Condon-ShortleyPhase.html Condon-Shortley phase] . The convention chosen below is in agreement with Mathematica, for instance.
The more useful of the Goldberg, et al., formulas is the following::::::::
A Mathematica notebook using this formula to calculate arbitrary spin-weighted spherical harmonics can be found [http://www.black-holes.org/SpinWeightedSphericalHarmonics.nb here] .
With the phase convention here and .
First few spin-weighted spherical harmonics
Analytic expressions for the first few orthonormalized spin-weighted spherical harmonics :
= Spin-1, degree =::
Relation to Wigner rotation matrices
This relation allows the spin harmonics to be calculated using recursion relations for the
D-matrices.References
cite journal | title = The relationship between monopole harmonics and spin-weighted spherical harmonics | author = Tevian Dray | journal = J. Math. Phys. | volume = 26 | number = 5 | pages = 1030--1033 | year = 1985 | month = May | doi = 10.1063/1.526533 | publisher = American Institute of Physics | url = http://link.aip.org/link/?JMP/26/1030/1 A more modern and somewhat generalized treatment.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.