Legendre transformation

English edit

 
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Etymology edit

Named after Adrien-Marie Legendre (1752–1852), a French mathematician.

Noun edit

Legendre transformation (plural Legendre transformations)

  1. (mathematics) Given a function   which is concave up with respect to x (i.e., its second derivative with respect to x is greater than zero), an involutive procedure for replacing x with another variable, say   thus yielding another function, say  . This new function contains all of the information of the original f encoded, as it were, within it so that   and applying a similar transformation to F yields the original f. The formula is:   where x must be expressed as a function of p. (Note: The concave upwardness means that   is monotonically increasing, which means that p as a function of x is invertible, so x should be expressible as a function of p.)
  2. (physics, analytical dynamics) A formula for converting a Lagrangian function to a Hamiltonian function (or vice versa).
    A Legendre transformation looks like this:  , where the   are generalized coordinates, their dotted versions   are their time derivatives, the   are generalized momenta or conjugate momenta,   is a Lagrangian function and   is a Hamiltonian function.
  3. (thermodynamics) A relation between internal energy (expressed in terms of volume and entropy) and enthalpy (replacing volume with pressure), or between internal energy and Helmholtz free energy (replacing entropy with temperature), or between enthalpy and Gibbs free energy (replacing entropy with temperature), or between internal energy and Gibbs free energy (replacing volume with pressure and entropy with temperature), or between Helmholtz free energy and Gibbs free energy (replacing volume with pressure).