Chemical Dynamics/Electrostatics/Fourier Transforms
The Fourier transform is a useful mathematical transformation often utilized in many scientific and engineering fields. Here we extract useful concepts of Fourier transformation and logically arrange them to form a foundation for the Ewald summation and other related methods in electrostatics. Readers could check out other more mathematically formal introduction of Fourier transform
Definition
[edit | edit source]We use the following convention in which the Fourier transform is a unitary transformation on the 3-D Cartesian space R3, the Fourier transform and its inverse transform are symmetric:
The translation theorem
[edit | edit source]Given a fixed position vector R0, if g(r) = ƒ(r − R0), then
Now, change r to a new variable by:
The convolution theorem
[edit | edit source]The convolution of f and g is usually denoted as f∗g, using an asterisk or star. It is defined as the integral of the product of the two functions after one is reversed and shifted:
The convolution theorem for the Fourier transform says:
If
then
- .