Radial function


In mathematics, a radial function is a function defined on a Euclidean space Rn whose value at each point depends only on the distance between that point and the origin. For example, a radial function Φ in two dimensions has the form
where φ is a function of a single non-negative real variable. Radial functions are contrasted with spherical functions, and any decent function on Euclidean space can be decomposed into a series consisting of radial and spherical parts: the solid spherical harmonic expansion.
A function is radial if and only if it is invariant under all rotations leaving the origin fixed. That is, ƒ is radial if and only if
for all, the special orthogonal group in n dimensions. This characterization of radial functions makes it possible also to define radial distributions. These are distributions S on Rn such that
for every test function φ and rotation ρ.
Given any function ƒ, its radial part is given by averaging over spheres centered at the origin. To wit,
where ωn−1 is the surface area of the -sphere Sn−1, and,. It follows essentially by Fubini's theorem that a locally integrable function has a well-defined radial part at almost every r.
The Fourier transform of a radial function is also radial, and so radial functions play a vital role in Fourier analysis. Furthermore, the Fourier transform of a radial function typically has stronger decay behavior at infinity than non-radial functions: for radial functions bounded in a neighborhood of the origin, the Fourier transform decays faster than R−/2. The Bessel functions are a special class of radial function that arise naturally in Fourier analysis as the radial eigenfunctions of the Laplacian; as such they appear naturally as the radial portion of the Fourier transform.