The notion of capacity of a set and of "capacitable" set was introduced by Gustave Choquet in 1950: for a detailed account, see reference.
Definitions
Condenser capacity
Let Σ be a closed, smooth, -dimensional hypersurface in n-dimensional Euclidean space ℝn, n ≥ 3; K will denote the n-dimensional compact set of which Σ is the boundary. Let S be another -dimensional hypersurface that encloses Σ: in reference to its origins in electromagnetism, the pair is known as a condenser. The condenser capacity of Σ relative to S, denoted C or cap, is given by the surface integral where:
ally, the harmonic capacity of K, the region bounded by Σ, can be found by taking the condenser capacity of Σ with respect to infinity. More precisely, letu be the harmonic function in the complement of K satisfying u = 1 on Σ and u → 0 as x → ∞. Thus u is the Newtonian potential of the simple layer Σ. Then the harmonic capacity of K, denoted C or cap, is then defined by If S is a rectifiable hypersurface completely enclosing K, then the harmonic capacity can be equivalently rewritten as the integral over S of the outward normal derivative of u: The harmonic capacity can also be understood as a limit of the condenser capacity. To wit, let Sr denote the sphere of radius r about the origin in ℝn. Since K is bounded, for sufficiently larger, Sr will enclose K and will form a condenser pair. The harmonic capacity is then the limit as r tends to infinity: The harmonic capacity is a mathematically abstract version of the electrostatic capacity of the conductor K and is always non-negative and finite: 0 ≤ C < +∞.
Generalizations
The characterization of the capacity of a set as the minimum of an energy functional achieving particular boundary values, given above, can be extended to other energy functionals in the calculus of variations.
Solutions to a uniformly elliptic partial differential equation with divergence form are minimizers of the associated energy functional subject to appropriate boundary conditions. The capacity of a set E with respect to a domain D containing E is defined as the infimum of the energy over all continuously-differentiable functions v on D with v = 1 on E; and v = 0 on the boundary of D. The minimum energy is achieved by a function known as the capacitary potential of E with respect to D, and it solves the obstacle problem on D with the obstacle function provided by the indicator function of E. The capacitary potential is alternately characterized as the unique solution of the equation with the appropriate boundary conditions.