If I have $$ \nabla u(x,y) \cdot \nabla u(x,y), $$ can I distribute nabla as $$ \nabla (u(x,y) \cdot u(x,y))= \nabla \rvert u(x,y)\lvert ^2 \quad \text{?} $$ or $$ (\nabla \cdot \nabla)u(x,y)=\nabla^2u(x,y) \quad \text{?} $$ or $$ \lvert \nabla u(x,y) \rvert ^2= \lvert \nabla\rvert^2\lvert u(x,y)\rvert^2 \quad \text{?} $$
2026-04-08 14:33:47.1775658827
Scalar product of two gradients?
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Of course $$\nabla(u(x,y)\cdot u(x,y))=\nabla|u(x,y)|^2,$$ because you just rewrote the term the operator is acting on. The second one is more or less a definition. As $\nabla$ is an operator, scalar products are not defined a priori. But you define it to be the same as applying the operator twice because it works well with the way of writing $\nabla$as $(\frac{\partial}{\partial x},\frac{\partial}{\partial y},\frac{\partial}{\partial z})$.
Assuming that
$$|\nabla|^2 = \frac{\partial^2}{\partial x^2} + \frac{\partial^2}{\partial y^2} + \frac{\partial^2}{\partial z^2} $$
I would disagree one the last one. The left side contains a first derivative squared, the right side is a second derivative of a square. In general $$(f^2)''=(2ff')'=2ff''+2(f')^2\not=(f')^2.$$
Maybe the author just defined $|\nabla|^2$ in such a way, so that it agrees. But in my understanding $\nabla\cdot\nabla=|\nabla|^2$.