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Hamiltonian mechanics

Hamiltonian mechanics emerged in 1833 as a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics. Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton,[1] Hamiltonian mechanics replaces (generalized) velocities used in Lagrangian mechanics with (generalized) momenta. Both theories provide interpretations of classical mechanics and describe the same physical phenomena.

Sir William Rowan Hamilton

Hamiltonian mechanics has a close relationship with geometry (notably, symplectic geometry and Poisson structures) and serves as a link between classical and quantum mechanics.

Overview edit

Phase space coordinates (p,q) and Hamiltonian H edit

Let   be a mechanical system with the configuration space   and the smooth Lagrangian   Select a standard coordinate system   on   The quantities   are called momenta. (Also generalized momenta, conjugate momenta, and canonical momenta). For a time instant   the Legendre transformation of   is defined as the map   which is assumed to have a smooth inverse   For a system with   degrees of freedom, the Lagrangian mechanics defines the energy function

 

The Legendre transform of   turns   into a function   known as the Hamiltonian. The Hamiltonian satisfies

 
which implies that
 
where the velocities   are found from the ( -dimensional) equation   which, by assumption, is uniquely solvable for   The ( -dimensional) pair   is called phase space coordinates. (Also canonical coordinates).

From Euler–Lagrange equation to Hamilton's equations edit

In phase space coordinates   the ( -dimensional) Euler–Lagrange equation

 
becomes Hamilton's equations in   dimensions

 

Proof

The Hamiltonian   is the Legendre transform of the Lagrangian  , thus one has

 

and thus

 ,

Besides, since   the Euler-Lagrange equations yield  

From stationary action principle to Hamilton's equations edit

Let   be the set of smooth paths   for which   and   The action functional   is defined via

 
where   and   (see above). A path   is a stationary point of   (and hence is an equation of motion) if and only if the path   in phase space coordinates obeys the Hamilton's equations.

Basic physical interpretation edit

A simple interpretation of Hamiltonian mechanics comes from its application on a one-dimensional system consisting of one nonrelativistic particle of mass m. The value   of the Hamiltonian is the total energy of the system, in this case the sum of kinetic and potential energy, traditionally denoted T and V, respectively. Here p is the momentum mv and q is the space coordinate. Then

 
T is a function of p alone, while V is a function of q alone (i.e., T and V are scleronomic).

In this example, the time derivative of q is the velocity, and so the first Hamilton equation means that the particle's velocity equals the derivative of its kinetic energy with respect to its momentum. The time derivative of the momentum p equals the Newtonian force, and so the second Hamilton equation means that the force equals the negative gradient of potential energy.

Example edit

A spherical pendulum consists of a mass m moving without friction on the surface of a sphere. The only forces acting on the mass are the reaction from the sphere and gravity. Spherical coordinates are used to describe the position of the mass in terms of (r, θ, φ), where r is fixed, r = .

 
Spherical pendulum: angles and velocities.

The Lagrangian for this system is[2]

 

Thus the Hamiltonian is

 
where
 
and
 
In terms of coordinates and momenta, the Hamiltonian reads
 
Hamilton's equations give the time evolution of coordinates and conjugate momenta in four first-order differential equations,
 
Momentum  , which corresponds to the vertical component of angular momentum  , is a constant of motion. That is a consequence of the rotational symmetry of the system around the vertical axis. Being absent from the Hamiltonian, azimuth   is a cyclic coordinate, which implies conservation of its conjugate momentum.

Deriving Hamilton's equations edit

Hamilton's equations can be derived by a calculation with the Lagrangian  , generalized positions qi, and generalized velocities i, where  .[3] Here we work off-shell, meaning   are independent coordinates in phase space, not constrained to follow any equations of motion (in particular,   is not a derivative of  ). The total differential of the Lagrangian is:

 
The generalized momentum coordinates were defined as  , so we may rewrite the equation as:
 

After rearranging, one obtains:

 

The term in parentheses on the left-hand side is just the Hamiltonian   defined previously, therefore:

 

One may also calculate the total differential of the Hamiltonian   with respect to coordinates   instead of  , yielding:

 

One may now equate these two expressions for  , one in terms of  , the other in terms of  :

 

Since these calculations are off-shell, one can equate the respective coefficients of   on the two sides:

 

On-shell, one substitutes parametric functions   which define a trajectory in phase space with velocities  , obeying Lagrange's equations:

 

Rearranging and writing in terms of the on-shell   gives:

 

Thus Lagrange's equations are equivalent to Hamilton's equations:

 

In the case of time-independent   and  , i.e.  , Hamilton's equations consist of 2n first-order differential equations, while Lagrange's equations consist of n second-order equations. Hamilton's equations usually do not reduce the difficulty of finding explicit solutions, but important theoretical results can be derived from them, because coordinates and momenta are independent variables with nearly symmetric roles.

Hamilton's equations have another advantage over Lagrange's equations: if a system has a symmetry, so that some coordinate   does not occur in the Hamiltonian (i.e. a cyclic coordinate), the corresponding momentum coordinate   is conserved along each trajectory, and that coordinate can be reduced to a constant in the other equations of the set. This effectively reduces the problem from n coordinates to (n − 1) coordinates: this is the basis of symplectic reduction in geometry. In the Lagrangian framework, the conservation of momentum also follows immediately, however all the generalized velocities   still occur in the Lagrangian, and a system of equations in n coordinates still has to be solved.[4]

The Lagrangian and Hamiltonian approaches provide the groundwork for deeper results in classical mechanics, and suggest analogous formulations in quantum mechanics: the path integral formulation and the Schrödinger equation.

Properties of the Hamiltonian edit

  • The value of the Hamiltonian   is the total energy of the system if and only if the energy function   has the same property. (See definition of  
  •   when   form a solution of Hamilton's equations.
    Indeed,   and everything but the final term cancels out.
  •   does not change under point transformations, i.e. smooth changes   of space coordinates. (Follows from the invariance of the energy function   under point transformations. The invariance of   can be established directly).
  •   (See Deriving Hamilton's equations).
  •   (Compare Hamilton's and Euler-Lagrange equations or see Deriving Hamilton's equations).
  •   if and only if  
    A coordinate for which the last equation holds is called cyclic (or ignorable). Every cyclic coordinate   reduces the number of degrees of freedom by   causes the corresponding momentum   to be conserved, and makes Hamilton's equations easier to solve.

Hamiltonian of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field edit

A sufficient illustration of Hamiltonian mechanics is given by the Hamiltonian of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field. In Cartesian coordinates the Lagrangian of a non-relativistic classical particle in an electromagnetic field is (in SI Units):

 
where q is the electric charge of the particle, φ is the electric scalar potential, and the Ai are the components of the magnetic vector potential that may all explicitly depend on   and  .

This Lagrangian, combined with Euler–Lagrange equation, produces the Lorentz force law

 
and is called minimal coupling.

The canonical momenta are given by:

 

The Hamiltonian, as the Legendre transformation of the Lagrangian, is therefore:

 

This equation is used frequently in quantum mechanics.

Under gauge transformation:

 
where f(r, t) is any scalar function of space and time. The aforementioned Lagrangian, the canonical momenta, and the Hamiltonian transform like:
 
which still produces the same Hamilton's equation:
 

In quantum mechanics, the wave function will also undergo a local U(1) group transformation[5] during the Gauge Transformation, which implies that all physical results must be invariant under local U(1) transformations.

Relativistic charged particle in an electromagnetic field edit

The relativistic Lagrangian for a particle (rest mass   and charge  ) is given by:

 

Thus the particle's canonical momentum is

 
that is, the sum of the kinetic momentum and the potential momentum.

Solving for the velocity, we get

 

So the Hamiltonian is

 

This results in the force equation (equivalent to the Euler–Lagrange equation)

 
from which one can derive
 

The above derivation makes use of the vector calculus identity:

 

An equivalent expression for the Hamiltonian as function of the relativistic (kinetic) momentum,  , is

 

This has the advantage that kinetic momentum   can be measured experimentally whereas canonical momentum   cannot. Notice that the Hamiltonian (total energy) can be viewed as the sum of the relativistic energy (kinetic+rest),  , plus the potential energy,  .

From symplectic geometry to Hamilton's equations edit

Geometry of Hamiltonian systems edit

The Hamiltonian can induce a symplectic structure on a smooth even-dimensional manifold M2n in several equivalent ways, the best known being the following:[6]

As a closed nondegenerate symplectic 2-form ω. According to the Darboux's theorem, in a small neighbourhood around any point on M there exist suitable local coordinates   (canonical or symplectic coordinates) in which the symplectic form becomes:

 
The form   induces a natural isomorphism of the tangent space with the cotangent space:   This is done by mapping a vector   to the 1-form   where   for all   Due to the bilinearity and non-degeneracy of   and the fact that   the mapping   is indeed a linear isomorphism. This isomorphism is natural in that it does not change with change of coordinates on   Repeating over all   we end up with an isomorphism   between the infinite-dimensional space of smooth vector fields and that of smooth 1-forms. For every   and  
 

(In algebraic terms, one would say that the  -modules   and   are isomorphic). If   then, for every fixed     and     is known as a Hamiltonian vector field. The respective differential equation on  

 
is called Hamilton's equation. Here   and   is the (time-dependent) value of the vector field   at  

A Hamiltonian system may be understood as a fiber bundle E over time R, with the fiber Et being the position space at time tR. The Lagrangian is thus a function on the jet bundle J over E; taking the fiberwise Legendre transform of the Lagrangian produces a function on the dual bundle over time whose fiber at t is the cotangent space TEt, which comes equipped with a natural symplectic form, and this latter function is the Hamiltonian. The correspondence between Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics is achieved with the tautological one-form.

Any smooth real-valued function H on a symplectic manifold can be used to define a Hamiltonian system. The function H is known as "the Hamiltonian" or "the energy function." The symplectic manifold is then called the phase space. The Hamiltonian induces a special vector field on the symplectic manifold, known as the Hamiltonian vector field.

The Hamiltonian vector field induces a Hamiltonian flow on the manifold. This is a one-parameter family of transformations of the manifold (the parameter of the curves is commonly called "the time"); in other words, an isotopy of symplectomorphisms, starting with the identity. By Liouville's theorem, each symplectomorphism preserves the volume form on the phase space. The collection of symplectomorphisms induced by the Hamiltonian flow is commonly called "the Hamiltonian mechanics" of the Hamiltonian system.

The symplectic structure induces a Poisson bracket. The Poisson bracket gives the space of functions on the manifold the structure of a Lie algebra.

If F and G are smooth functions on M then the smooth function ω2(IdG, IdF) is properly defined; it is called a Poisson bracket of functions F and G and is denoted {F, G}. The Poisson bracket has the following properties:

  1. bilinearity
  2. antisymmetry
  3. Leibniz rule:  
  4. Jacobi identity:  
  5. non-degeneracy: if the point x on M is not critical for F then a smooth function G exists such that  .

Given a function f

 
if there is a probability distribution ρ, then (since the phase space velocity   has zero divergence and probability is conserved) its convective derivative can be shown to be zero and so
 

This is called Liouville's theorem. Every smooth function G over the symplectic manifold generates a one-parameter family of symplectomorphisms and if {G, H} = 0, then G is conserved and the symplectomorphisms are symmetry transformations.

A Hamiltonian may have multiple conserved quantities Gi. If the symplectic manifold has dimension 2n and there are n functionally independent conserved quantities Gi which are in involution (i.e., {Gi, Gj} = 0), then the Hamiltonian is Liouville integrable. The Liouville–Arnold theorem says that, locally, any Liouville integrable Hamiltonian can be transformed via a symplectomorphism into a new Hamiltonian with the conserved quantities Gi as coordinates; the new coordinates are called action-angle coordinates. The transformed Hamiltonian depends only on the Gi, and hence the equations of motion have the simple form

 
for some function F.[7] There is an entire field focusing on small deviations from integrable systems governed by the KAM theorem.

The integrability of Hamiltonian vector fields is an open question. In general, Hamiltonian systems are chaotic; concepts of measure, completeness, integrability and stability are poorly defined.

Riemannian manifolds edit

An important special case consists of those Hamiltonians that are quadratic forms, that is, Hamiltonians that can be written as

 
where ⟨ , ⟩q is a smoothly varying inner product on the fibers T
q
Q
, the cotangent space to the point q in the configuration space, sometimes called a cometric. This Hamiltonian consists entirely of the kinetic term.

If one considers a Riemannian manifold or a pseudo-Riemannian manifold, the Riemannian metric induces a linear isomorphism between the tangent and cotangent bundles. (See Musical isomorphism). Using this isomorphism, one can define a cometric. (In coordinates, the matrix defining the cometric is the inverse of the matrix defining the metric.) The solutions to the Hamilton–Jacobi equations for this Hamiltonian are then the same as the geodesics on the manifold. In particular, the Hamiltonian flow in this case is the same thing as the geodesic flow. The existence of such solutions, and the completeness of the set of solutions, are discussed in detail in the article on geodesics. See also Geodesics as Hamiltonian flows.

Sub-Riemannian manifolds edit

When the cometric is degenerate, then it is not invertible. In this case, one does not have a Riemannian manifold, as one does not have a metric. However, the Hamiltonian still exists. In the case where the cometric is degenerate at every point q of the configuration space manifold Q, so that the rank of the cometric is less than the dimension of the manifold Q, one has a sub-Riemannian manifold.

The Hamiltonian in this case is known as a sub-Riemannian Hamiltonian. Every such Hamiltonian uniquely determines the cometric, and vice versa. This implies that every sub-Riemannian manifold is uniquely determined by its sub-Riemannian Hamiltonian, and that the converse is true: every sub-Riemannian manifold has a unique sub-Riemannian Hamiltonian. The existence of sub-Riemannian geodesics is given by the Chow–Rashevskii theorem.

The continuous, real-valued Heisenberg group provides a simple example of a sub-Riemannian manifold. For the Heisenberg group, the Hamiltonian is given by

 
pz is not involved in the Hamiltonian.

Poisson algebras edit

Hamiltonian systems can be generalized in various ways. Instead of simply looking at the algebra of smooth functions over a symplectic manifold, Hamiltonian mechanics can be formulated on general commutative unital real Poisson algebras. A state is a continuous linear functional on the Poisson algebra (equipped with some suitable topology) such that for any element A of the algebra, A2 maps to a nonnegative real number.

A further generalization is given by Nambu dynamics.

Generalization to quantum mechanics through Poisson bracket edit

Hamilton's equations above work well for classical mechanics, but not for quantum mechanics, since the differential equations discussed assume that one can specify the exact position and momentum of the particle simultaneously at any point in time. However, the equations can be further generalized to then be extended to apply to quantum mechanics as well as to classical mechanics, through the deformation of the Poisson algebra over p and q to the algebra of Moyal brackets.

Specifically, the more general form of the Hamilton's equation reads

 
where f is some function of p and q, and H is the Hamiltonian. To find out the rules for evaluating a Poisson bracket without resorting to differential equations, see Lie algebra; a Poisson bracket is the name for the Lie bracket in a Poisson algebra. These Poisson brackets can then be extended to Moyal brackets comporting to an inequivalent Lie algebra, as proven by Hilbrand J. Groenewold, and thereby describe quantum mechanical diffusion in phase space (See the phase space formulation and the Wigner–Weyl transform). This more algebraic approach not only permits ultimately extending probability distributions in phase space to Wigner quasi-probability distributions, but, at the mere Poisson bracket classical setting, also provides more power in helping analyze the relevant conserved quantities in a system.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hamilton, William Rowan, Sir (1833). On a general method of expressing the paths of light, & of the planets, by the coefficients of a characteristic function. Printed by P.D. Hardy. OCLC 68159539.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Landau & Lifshitz 1976, pp. 33–34
  3. ^ This derivation is along the lines as given in Arnol'd 1989, pp. 65–66
  4. ^ Goldstein, Poole & Safko 2002, pp. 347–349
  5. ^ Zinn-Justin, Jean; Guida, Riccardo (2008-12-04). "Gauge invariance". Scholarpedia. 3 (12): 8287. Bibcode:2008SchpJ...3.8287Z. doi:10.4249/scholarpedia.8287. ISSN 1941-6016.
  6. ^ Arnol'd, Kozlov & Neĩshtadt 1988, §3. Hamiltonian mechanics.
  7. ^ Arnol'd, Kozlov & Neĩshtadt 1988

Further reading edit

External links edit

hamiltonian, mechanics, emerged, 1833, reformulation, lagrangian, mechanics, introduced, william, rowan, hamilton, replaces, generalized, velocities, displaystyle, used, lagrangian, mechanics, with, generalized, momenta, both, theories, provide, interpretation. Hamiltonian mechanics emerged in 1833 as a reformulation of Lagrangian mechanics Introduced by Sir William Rowan Hamilton 1 Hamiltonian mechanics replaces generalized velocities q i displaystyle dot q i used in Lagrangian mechanics with generalized momenta Both theories provide interpretations of classical mechanics and describe the same physical phenomena Sir William Rowan HamiltonHamiltonian mechanics has a close relationship with geometry notably symplectic geometry and Poisson structures and serves as a link between classical and quantum mechanics Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Phase space coordinates p q and Hamiltonian H 1 2 From Euler Lagrange equation to Hamilton s equations 1 3 From stationary action principle to Hamilton s equations 1 4 Basic physical interpretation 2 Example 3 Deriving Hamilton s equations 4 Properties of the Hamiltonian 5 Hamiltonian of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field 5 1 Relativistic charged particle in an electromagnetic field 6 From symplectic geometry to Hamilton s equations 6 1 Geometry of Hamiltonian systems 6 2 Riemannian manifolds 6 3 Sub Riemannian manifolds 6 4 Poisson algebras 6 5 Generalization to quantum mechanics through Poisson bracket 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksOverview editPhase space coordinates p q and Hamiltonian H edit Let M L displaystyle M mathcal L nbsp be a mechanical system with the configuration space M displaystyle M nbsp and the smooth Lagrangian L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp Select a standard coordinate system q q displaystyle boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q nbsp on M displaystyle M nbsp The quantities p i q q t def L q i displaystyle textstyle p i boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q t stackrel text def partial mathcal L partial dot q i nbsp are called momenta Also generalized momenta conjugate momenta and canonical momenta For a time instant t displaystyle t nbsp the Legendre transformation of L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp is defined as the map q q p q displaystyle boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q to left boldsymbol p boldsymbol q right nbsp which is assumed to have a smooth inverse p q q q displaystyle boldsymbol p boldsymbol q to boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q nbsp For a system with n displaystyle n nbsp degrees of freedom the Lagrangian mechanics defines the energy functionE L q q t def i 1 n q i L q i L displaystyle E mathcal L boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q t stackrel text def sum i 1 n dot q i frac partial mathcal L partial dot q i mathcal L nbsp The Legendre transform of L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp turns E L displaystyle E mathcal L nbsp into a function H p q t displaystyle mathcal H boldsymbol p boldsymbol q t nbsp known as the Hamiltonian The Hamiltonian satisfiesH L q q t E L q q t displaystyle mathcal H left frac partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol dot q boldsymbol q t right E mathcal L boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q t nbsp which implies that H p q t i 1 n p i q i L q q t displaystyle mathcal H boldsymbol p boldsymbol q t sum i 1 n p i dot q i mathcal L boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q t nbsp where the velocities q q 1 q n displaystyle boldsymbol dot q dot q 1 ldots dot q n nbsp are found from the n displaystyle n nbsp dimensional equation p L q displaystyle textstyle boldsymbol p partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol dot q nbsp which by assumption is uniquely solvable for q displaystyle boldsymbol dot q nbsp The 2 n displaystyle 2n nbsp dimensional pair p q displaystyle boldsymbol p boldsymbol q nbsp is called phase space coordinates Also canonical coordinates From Euler Lagrange equation to Hamilton s equations edit In phase space coordinates p q displaystyle boldsymbol p boldsymbol q nbsp the n displaystyle n nbsp dimensional Euler Lagrange equation L q d d t L q 0 displaystyle frac partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol q frac d dt frac partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol dot q 0 nbsp becomes Hamilton s equations in 2 n displaystyle 2n nbsp dimensions d q d t H p d p d t H q displaystyle frac mathrm d boldsymbol q mathrm d t frac partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol p quad frac mathrm d boldsymbol p mathrm d t frac partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol q nbsp Proof The Hamiltonian H p q displaystyle mathcal H boldsymbol p boldsymbol q nbsp is the Legendre transform of the Lagrangian L q q displaystyle mathcal L boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q nbsp thus one has L q q H p q p q displaystyle mathcal L boldsymbol q boldsymbol dot q mathcal H boldsymbol p boldsymbol q boldsymbol p boldsymbol dot q nbsp and thus H p q L q H q displaystyle begin aligned partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol p amp boldsymbol dot q partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol q amp partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol q end aligned nbsp Besides since p L q displaystyle boldsymbol p partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol dot q nbsp the Euler Lagrange equations yield d p d t L q H q displaystyle mathrm d boldsymbol p mathrm d t partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol q partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol q nbsp From stationary action principle to Hamilton s equations edit Let P a b x a x b displaystyle mathcal P a b boldsymbol x a boldsymbol x b nbsp be the set of smooth paths q a b M displaystyle boldsymbol q a b to M nbsp for which q a x a displaystyle boldsymbol q a boldsymbol x a nbsp and q b x b displaystyle boldsymbol q b boldsymbol x b nbsp The action functional S P a b x a x b R displaystyle mathcal S mathcal P a b boldsymbol x a boldsymbol x b to mathbb R nbsp is defined viaS q a b L t q t q t d t a b i 1 n p i q i H p q t d t displaystyle mathcal S boldsymbol q int a b mathcal L t boldsymbol q t dot boldsymbol q t dt int a b left sum i 1 n p i dot q i mathcal H boldsymbol p boldsymbol q t right dt nbsp where q q t displaystyle boldsymbol q boldsymbol q t nbsp and p L q displaystyle boldsymbol p partial mathcal L partial boldsymbol dot q nbsp see above A path q P a b x a x b displaystyle boldsymbol q in mathcal P a b boldsymbol x a boldsymbol x b nbsp is a stationary point of S displaystyle mathcal S nbsp and hence is an equation of motion if and only if the path p t q t displaystyle boldsymbol p t boldsymbol q t nbsp in phase space coordinates obeys the Hamilton s equations Basic physical interpretation edit A simple interpretation of Hamiltonian mechanics comes from its application on a one dimensional system consisting of one nonrelativistic particle of mass m The value H p q displaystyle H p q nbsp of the Hamiltonian is the total energy of the system in this case the sum of kinetic and potential energy traditionally denoted T and V respectively Here p is the momentum mv and q is the space coordinate ThenH T V T p 2 2 m V V q displaystyle mathcal H T V qquad T frac p 2 2m qquad V V q nbsp T is a function of p alone while V is a function of q alone i e T and V are scleronomic In this example the time derivative of q is the velocity and so the first Hamilton equation means that the particle s velocity equals the derivative of its kinetic energy with respect to its momentum The time derivative of the momentum p equals the Newtonian force and so the second Hamilton equation means that the force equals the negative gradient of potential energy Example editMain article Spherical pendulumA spherical pendulum consists of a mass m moving without friction on the surface of a sphere The only forces acting on the mass are the reaction from the sphere and gravity Spherical coordinates are used to describe the position of the mass in terms of r 8 f where r is fixed r ℓ nbsp Spherical pendulum angles and velocities The Lagrangian for this system is 2 L 1 2 m ℓ 2 8 2 sin 2 8 f 2 m g ℓ cos 8 displaystyle L frac 1 2 m ell 2 left dot theta 2 sin 2 theta dot varphi 2 right mg ell cos theta nbsp Thus the Hamiltonian isH P 8 8 P f f L displaystyle H P theta dot theta P varphi dot varphi L nbsp where P 8 L 8 m ℓ 2 8 displaystyle P theta frac partial L partial dot theta m ell 2 dot theta nbsp and P f L f m ℓ 2 sin 2 8 f displaystyle P varphi frac partial L partial dot varphi m ell 2 sin 2 theta dot varphi nbsp In terms of coordinates and momenta the Hamiltonian reads H 1 2 m ℓ 2 8 2 1 2 m ℓ 2 sin 2 8 f 2 T m g ℓ cos 8 V P 8 2 2 m ℓ 2 P f 2 2 m ℓ 2 sin 2 8 m g ℓ cos 8 displaystyle H underbrace left frac 1 2 m ell 2 dot theta 2 frac 1 2 m ell 2 sin 2 theta dot varphi 2 right T underbrace Big mg ell cos theta Big V frac P theta 2 2m ell 2 frac P varphi 2 2m ell 2 sin 2 theta mg ell cos theta nbsp Hamilton s equations give the time evolution of coordinates and conjugate momenta in four first order differential equations 8 P 8 m ℓ 2 f P f m ℓ 2 sin 2 8 P 8 P f 2 m ℓ 2 sin 3 8 cos 8 m g ℓ sin 8 P f 0 displaystyle begin aligned dot theta amp P theta over m ell 2 6pt dot varphi amp P varphi over m ell 2 sin 2 theta 6pt dot P theta amp P varphi 2 over m ell 2 sin 3 theta cos theta mg ell sin theta 6pt dot P varphi amp 0 end aligned nbsp Momentum P f displaystyle P varphi nbsp which corresponds to the vertical component of angular momentum L z ℓ sin 8 m ℓ sin 8 f displaystyle L z ell sin theta times m ell sin theta dot varphi nbsp is a constant of motion That is a consequence of the rotational symmetry of the system around the vertical axis Being absent from the Hamiltonian azimuth f displaystyle varphi nbsp is a cyclic coordinate which implies conservation of its conjugate momentum Deriving Hamilton s equations editHamilton s equations can be derived by a calculation with the Lagrangian L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp generalized positions qi and generalized velocities q i where i 1 n displaystyle i 1 ldots n nbsp 3 Here we work off shell meaning q i q i t displaystyle q i dot q i t nbsp are independent coordinates in phase space not constrained to follow any equations of motion in particular q i displaystyle dot q i nbsp is not a derivative of q i displaystyle q i nbsp The total differential of the Lagrangian is d L i L q i d q i L q i d q i L t d t displaystyle mathrm d mathcal L sum i left frac partial mathcal L partial q i mathrm d q i frac partial mathcal L partial dot q i mathrm d dot q i right frac partial mathcal L partial t mathrm d t nbsp The generalized momentum coordinates were defined as p i L q i displaystyle p i partial mathcal L partial dot q i nbsp so we may rewrite the equation as d L i L q i d q i p i d q i L t d t i L q i d q i d p i q i q i d p i L t d t displaystyle begin aligned mathrm d mathcal L amp sum i left frac partial mathcal L partial q i mathrm d q i p i mathrm d dot q i right frac partial mathcal L partial t mathrm d t amp sum i left frac partial mathcal L partial q i mathrm d q i mathrm d p i dot q i dot q i mathrm d p i right frac partial mathcal L partial t mathrm d t end aligned nbsp After rearranging one obtains d i p i q i L i L q i d q i q i d p i L t d t displaystyle mathrm d left sum i p i dot q i mathcal L right sum i left frac partial mathcal L partial q i mathrm d q i dot q i mathrm d p i right frac partial mathcal L partial t mathrm d t nbsp The term in parentheses on the left hand side is just the Hamiltonian H p i q i L textstyle mathcal H sum p i dot q i mathcal L nbsp defined previously therefore d H i L q i d q i q i d p i L t d t displaystyle mathrm d mathcal H sum i left frac partial mathcal L partial q i mathrm d q i dot q i mathrm d p i right frac partial mathcal L partial t mathrm d t nbsp One may also calculate the total differential of the Hamiltonian H displaystyle mathcal H nbsp with respect to coordinates q i p i t displaystyle q i p i t nbsp instead of q i q i t displaystyle q i dot q i t nbsp yielding d H i H q i d q i H p i d p i H t d t displaystyle mathrm d mathcal H sum i left frac partial mathcal H partial q i mathrm d q i frac partial mathcal H partial p i mathrm d p i right frac partial mathcal H partial t mathrm d t nbsp One may now equate these two expressions for d H displaystyle d mathcal H nbsp one in terms of L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp the other in terms of H displaystyle mathcal H nbsp i L q i d q i q i d p i L t d t i H q i d q i H p i d p i H t d t displaystyle sum i left frac partial mathcal L partial q i mathrm d q i dot q i mathrm d p i right frac partial mathcal L partial t mathrm d t sum i left frac partial mathcal H partial q i mathrm d q i frac partial mathcal H partial p i mathrm d p i right frac partial mathcal H partial t mathrm d t nbsp Since these calculations are off shell one can equate the respective coefficients of d q i d p i d t displaystyle mathrm d q i mathrm d p i mathrm d t nbsp on the two sides H q i L q i H p i q i H t L t displaystyle frac partial mathcal H partial q i frac partial mathcal L partial q i quad quad frac partial mathcal H partial p i dot q i quad quad frac partial mathcal H partial t partial mathcal L over partial t nbsp On shell one substitutes parametric functions q i q i t displaystyle q i q i t nbsp which define a trajectory in phase space with velocities q i d d t q i t textstyle dot q i tfrac d dt q i t nbsp obeying Lagrange s equations d d t L q i L q i 0 displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d t frac partial mathcal L partial dot q i frac partial mathcal L partial q i 0 nbsp Rearranging and writing in terms of the on shell p i p i t displaystyle p i p i t nbsp gives L q i p i displaystyle frac partial mathcal L partial q i dot p i nbsp Thus Lagrange s equations are equivalent to Hamilton s equations H q i p i H p i q i H t L t displaystyle frac partial mathcal H partial q i dot p i quad quad frac partial mathcal H partial p i dot q i quad quad frac partial mathcal H partial t frac partial mathcal L partial t nbsp In the case of time independent H displaystyle mathcal H nbsp and L displaystyle mathcal L nbsp i e H t L t 0 displaystyle partial mathcal H partial t partial mathcal L partial t 0 nbsp Hamilton s equations consist of 2n first order differential equations while Lagrange s equations consist of n second order equations Hamilton s equations usually do not reduce the difficulty of finding explicit solutions but important theoretical results can be derived from them because coordinates and momenta are independent variables with nearly symmetric roles Hamilton s equations have another advantage over Lagrange s equations if a system has a symmetry so that some coordinate q i displaystyle q i nbsp does not occur in the Hamiltonian i e a cyclic coordinate the corresponding momentum coordinate p i displaystyle p i nbsp is conserved along each trajectory and that coordinate can be reduced to a constant in the other equations of the set This effectively reduces the problem from n coordinates to n 1 coordinates this is the basis of symplectic reduction in geometry In the Lagrangian framework the conservation of momentum also follows immediately however all the generalized velocities q i displaystyle dot q i nbsp still occur in the Lagrangian and a system of equations in n coordinates still has to be solved 4 The Lagrangian and Hamiltonian approaches provide the groundwork for deeper results in classical mechanics and suggest analogous formulations in quantum mechanics the path integral formulation and the Schrodinger equation Properties of the Hamiltonian editThe value of the Hamiltonian H displaystyle mathcal H nbsp is the total energy of the system if and only if the energy function E L displaystyle E mathcal L nbsp has the same property See definition of H displaystyle mathcal H nbsp d H d t H t displaystyle frac d mathcal H dt frac partial mathcal H partial t nbsp when p t q t displaystyle mathbf p t mathbf q t nbsp form a solution of Hamilton s equations Indeed d H d t H p p H q q H t textstyle frac d mathcal H dt frac partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol p cdot dot boldsymbol p frac partial mathcal H partial boldsymbol q cdot dot boldsymbol q frac partial mathcal H partial t nbsp and everything but the final term cancels out H displaystyle mathcal H nbsp does not change under point transformations i e smooth changes q q displaystyle boldsymbol q leftrightarrow boldsymbol q nbsp of space coordinates Follows from the invariance of the energy function E L displaystyle E mathcal L nbsp under point transformations The invariance of E L displaystyle E mathcal L nbsp can be established directly H t L t displaystyle frac partial mathcal H partial t frac partial mathcal L partial t nbsp See Deriving Hamilton s equations H q i p i L q i displaystyle frac partial mathcal H partial q i dot p i frac partial mathcal L partial q i nbsp Compare Hamilton s and Euler Lagrange equations or see Deriving Hamilton s equations H q i 0 displaystyle frac partial mathcal H partial q i 0 nbsp if and only if L q i 0 displaystyle frac partial mathcal L partial q i 0 nbsp A coordinate for which the last equation holds is called cyclic or ignorable Every cyclic coordinate q i displaystyle q i nbsp reduces the number of degrees of freedom by 1 displaystyle 1 nbsp causes the corresponding momentum p i displaystyle p i nbsp to be conserved and makes Hamilton s equations easier to solve Hamiltonian of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field editA sufficient illustration of Hamiltonian mechanics is given by the Hamiltonian of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field In Cartesian coordinates the Lagrangian of a non relativistic classical particle in an electromagnetic field is in SI Units L i 1 2 m x i 2 i q x i A i q f displaystyle mathcal L sum i tfrac 1 2 m dot x i 2 sum i q dot x i A i q varphi nbsp where q is the electric charge of the particle f is the electric scalar potential and the Ai are the components of the magnetic vector potential that may all explicitly depend on x i displaystyle x i nbsp and t displaystyle t nbsp This Lagrangian combined with Euler Lagrange equation produces the Lorentz force lawm x q E q x B displaystyle m ddot mathbf x q mathbf E q dot mathbf x times mathbf B nbsp and is called minimal coupling The canonical momenta are given by p i L x i m x i q A i displaystyle p i frac partial mathcal L partial dot x i m dot x i qA i nbsp The Hamiltonian as the Legendre transformation of the Lagrangian is therefore H i x i p i L i p i q A i 2 2 m q f displaystyle mathcal H sum i dot x i p i mathcal L sum i frac left p i qA i right 2 2m q varphi nbsp This equation is used frequently in quantum mechanics Under gauge transformation A A f f f f displaystyle mathbf A rightarrow mathbf A nabla f quad varphi rightarrow varphi dot f nbsp where f r t is any scalar function of space and time The aforementioned Lagrangian the canonical momenta and the Hamiltonian transform like L L L q d f d t p p p q f H H H q f t displaystyle L rightarrow L L q frac df dt quad mathbf p rightarrow mathbf p mathbf p q nabla f quad H rightarrow H H q frac partial f partial t nbsp which still produces the same Hamilton s equation H x i p i x i p i x i p i L L x i p i L x i p i q x i p i d f d t d d t L x i p i q f x i p i p i displaystyle begin aligned left frac partial H partial x i right p i amp left frac partial partial x i right p i dot x i p i L left frac partial L partial x i right p i amp left frac partial L partial x i right p i q left frac partial partial x i right p i frac df dt amp frac d dt left left frac partial L partial dot x i right p i q left frac partial f partial x i right p i right amp dot p i end aligned nbsp In quantum mechanics the wave function will also undergo a local U 1 group transformation 5 during the Gauge Transformation which implies that all physical results must be invariant under local U 1 transformations Relativistic charged particle in an electromagnetic field edit The relativistic Lagrangian for a particle rest mass m displaystyle m nbsp and charge q displaystyle q nbsp is given by L t m c 2 1 x t 2 c 2 q x t A x t t q f x t t displaystyle mathcal L t mc 2 sqrt 1 frac dot mathbf x t 2 c 2 q dot mathbf x t cdot mathbf A left mathbf x t t right q varphi left mathbf x t t right nbsp Thus the particle s canonical momentum isp t L x m x 1 x 2 c 2 q A displaystyle mathbf p t frac partial mathcal L partial dot mathbf x frac m dot mathbf x sqrt 1 frac dot mathbf x 2 c 2 q mathbf A nbsp that is the sum of the kinetic momentum and the potential momentum Solving for the velocity we getx t p q A m 2 1 c 2 p q A 2 displaystyle dot mathbf x t frac mathbf p q mathbf A sqrt m 2 frac 1 c 2 left mathbf p q mathbf A right 2 nbsp So the Hamiltonian isH t x p L c m 2 c 2 p q A 2 q f displaystyle mathcal H t dot mathbf x cdot mathbf p mathcal L c sqrt m 2 c 2 left mathbf p q mathbf A right 2 q varphi nbsp This results in the force equation equivalent to the Euler Lagrange equation p H x q x A q f q x A q f displaystyle dot mathbf p frac partial mathcal H partial mathbf x q dot mathbf x cdot boldsymbol nabla mathbf A q boldsymbol nabla varphi q boldsymbol nabla dot mathbf x cdot mathbf A q boldsymbol nabla varphi nbsp from which one can derive d d t m x 1 x 2 c 2 d d t p q A p q A t q x A q x A q f q A t q x A q E q x B displaystyle begin aligned frac mathrm d mathrm d t left frac m dot mathbf x sqrt 1 frac dot mathbf x 2 c 2 right amp frac mathrm d mathrm d t mathbf p q mathbf A dot mathbf p q frac partial mathbf A partial t q dot mathbf x cdot nabla mathbf A amp q boldsymbol nabla dot mathbf x cdot mathbf A q boldsymbol nabla varphi q frac partial mathbf A partial t q dot mathbf x cdot nabla mathbf A amp q mathbf E q dot mathbf x times mathbf B end aligned nbsp The above derivation makes use of the vector calculus identity 1 2 A A A J A A A A A A A displaystyle tfrac 1 2 nabla left mathbf A cdot mathbf A right mathbf A cdot mathbf J mathbf A mathbf A cdot nabla mathbf A mathbf A cdot nabla mathbf A mathbf A times nabla times mathbf A nbsp An equivalent expression for the Hamiltonian as function of the relativistic kinetic momentum P g m x t p q A displaystyle mathbf P gamma m dot mathbf x t mathbf p q mathbf A nbsp isH t x t P t m c 2 g q f x t t g m c 2 q f x t t E V displaystyle mathcal H t dot mathbf x t cdot mathbf P t frac mc 2 gamma q varphi mathbf x t t gamma mc 2 q varphi mathbf x t t E V nbsp This has the advantage that kinetic momentum P displaystyle mathbf P nbsp can be measured experimentally whereas canonical momentum p displaystyle mathbf p nbsp cannot Notice that the Hamiltonian total energy can be viewed as the sum of the relativistic energy kinetic rest E g m c 2 displaystyle E gamma mc 2 nbsp plus the potential energy V q f displaystyle V q varphi nbsp From symplectic geometry to Hamilton s equations editGeometry of Hamiltonian systems edit The Hamiltonian can induce a symplectic structure on a smooth even dimensional manifold M2n in several equivalent ways the best known being the following 6 As a closed nondegenerate symplectic 2 form w According to the Darboux s theorem in a small neighbourhood around any point on M there exist suitable local coordinates p 1 p n q 1 q n displaystyle p 1 cdots p n q 1 cdots q n nbsp canonical or symplectic coordinates in which the symplectic form becomes w i 1 n d p i d q i displaystyle omega sum i 1 n dp i wedge dq i nbsp The form w displaystyle omega nbsp induces a natural isomorphism of the tangent space with the cotangent space T x M T x M displaystyle T x M cong T x M nbsp This is done by mapping a vector 3 T x M displaystyle xi in T x M nbsp to the 1 form w 3 T x M displaystyle omega xi in T x M nbsp where w 3 h w h 3 displaystyle omega xi eta omega eta xi nbsp for all h T x M displaystyle eta in T x M nbsp Due to the bilinearity and non degeneracy of w displaystyle omega nbsp and the fact that dim T x M dim T x M displaystyle dim T x M dim T x M nbsp the mapping 3 w 3 displaystyle xi to omega xi nbsp is indeed a linear isomorphism This isomorphism is natural in that it does not change with change of coordinates on M displaystyle M nbsp Repeating over all x M displaystyle x in M nbsp we end up with an isomorphism J 1 Vect M W 1 M displaystyle J 1 text Vect M to Omega 1 M nbsp between the infinite dimensional space of smooth vector fields and that of smooth 1 forms For every f g C M R displaystyle f g in C infty M mathbb R nbsp and 3 h Vect M displaystyle xi eta in text Vect M nbsp J 1 f 3 g h f J 1 3 g J 1 h displaystyle J 1 f xi g eta fJ 1 xi gJ 1 eta nbsp In algebraic terms one would say that the C M R displaystyle C infty M mathbb R nbsp modules Vect M displaystyle text Vect M nbsp and W 1 M displaystyle Omega 1 M nbsp are isomorphic If H C M R t R displaystyle H in C infty M times mathbb R t mathbb R nbsp then for every fixed t R t displaystyle t in mathbb R t nbsp d H W 1 M displaystyle dH in Omega 1 M nbsp and J d H Vect M displaystyle J dH in text Vect M nbsp J d H displaystyle J dH nbsp is known as a Hamiltonian vector field The respective differential equation on M displaystyle M nbsp x J d H x displaystyle dot x J dH x nbsp is called Hamilton s equation Here x x t displaystyle x x t nbsp and J d H x T x M displaystyle J dH x in T x M nbsp is the time dependent value of the vector field J d H displaystyle J dH nbsp at x M displaystyle x in M nbsp A Hamiltonian system may be understood as a fiber bundle E over time R with the fiber Et being the position space at time t R The Lagrangian is thus a function on the jet bundle J over E taking the fiberwise Legendre transform of the Lagrangian produces a function on the dual bundle over time whose fiber at t is the cotangent space T Et which comes equipped with a natural symplectic form and this latter function is the Hamiltonian The correspondence between Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics is achieved with the tautological one form Any smooth real valued function H on a symplectic manifold can be used to define a Hamiltonian system The function H is known as the Hamiltonian or the energy function The symplectic manifold is then called the phase space The Hamiltonian induces a special vector field on the symplectic manifold known as the Hamiltonian vector field The Hamiltonian vector field induces a Hamiltonian flow on the manifold This is a one parameter family of transformations of the manifold the parameter of the curves is commonly called the time in other words an isotopy of symplectomorphisms starting with the identity By Liouville s theorem each symplectomorphism preserves the volume form on the phase space The collection of symplectomorphisms induced by the Hamiltonian flow is commonly called the Hamiltonian mechanics of the Hamiltonian system The symplectic structure induces a Poisson bracket The Poisson bracket gives the space of functions on the manifold the structure of a Lie algebra If F and G are smooth functions on M then the smooth function w2 IdG IdF is properly defined it is called a Poisson bracket of functions F and G and is denoted F G The Poisson bracket has the following properties bilinearity antisymmetry Leibniz rule F 1 F 2 G F 1 F 2 G F 2 F 1 G displaystyle F 1 cdot F 2 G F 1 F 2 G F 2 F 1 G nbsp Jacobi identity H F G F G H G H F 0 displaystyle H F G F G H G H F equiv 0 nbsp non degeneracy if the point x on M is not critical for F then a smooth function G exists such that F G x 0 displaystyle F G x neq 0 nbsp Given a function fd d t f t f f H displaystyle frac mathrm d mathrm d t f frac partial partial t f left f mathcal H right nbsp if there is a probability distribution r then since the phase space velocity p i q i displaystyle dot p i dot q i nbsp has zero divergence and probability is conserved its convective derivative can be shown to be zero and so t r r H displaystyle frac partial partial t rho left rho mathcal H right nbsp This is called Liouville s theorem Every smooth function G over the symplectic manifold generates a one parameter family of symplectomorphisms and if G H 0 then G is conserved and the symplectomorphisms are symmetry transformations A Hamiltonian may have multiple conserved quantities Gi If the symplectic manifold has dimension 2n and there are n functionally independent conserved quantities Gi which are in involution i e Gi Gj 0 then the Hamiltonian is Liouville integrable The Liouville Arnold theorem says that locally any Liouville integrable Hamiltonian can be transformed via a symplectomorphism into a new Hamiltonian with the conserved quantities Gi as coordinates the new coordinates are called action angle coordinates The transformed Hamiltonian depends only on the Gi and hence the equations of motion have the simple formG i 0 f i F i G displaystyle dot G i 0 quad quad dot varphi i F i G nbsp for some function F 7 There is an entire field focusing on small deviations from integrable systems governed by the KAM theorem The integrability of Hamiltonian vector fields is an open question In general Hamiltonian systems are chaotic concepts of measure completeness integrability and stability are poorly defined Riemannian manifolds edit An important special case consists of those Hamiltonians that are quadratic forms that is Hamiltonians that can be written asH q p 1 2 p p q displaystyle mathcal H q p tfrac 1 2 langle p p rangle q nbsp where q is a smoothly varying inner product on the fibers T q Q the cotangent space to the point q in the configuration space sometimes called a cometric This Hamiltonian consists entirely of the kinetic term If one considers a Riemannian manifold or a pseudo Riemannian manifold the Riemannian metric induces a linear isomorphism between the tangent and cotangent bundles See Musical isomorphism Using this isomorphism one can define a cometric In coordinates the matrix defining the cometric is the inverse of the matrix defining the metric The solutions to the Hamilton Jacobi equations for this Hamiltonian are then the same as the geodesics on the manifold In particular the Hamiltonian flow in this case is the same thing as the geodesic flow The existence of such solutions and the completeness of the set of solutions are discussed in detail in the article on geodesics See also Geodesics as Hamiltonian flows Sub Riemannian manifolds edit When the cometric is degenerate then it is not invertible In this case one does not have a Riemannian manifold as one does not have a metric However the Hamiltonian still exists In the case where the cometric is degenerate at every point q of the configuration space manifold Q so that the rank of the cometric is less than the dimension of the manifold Q one has a sub Riemannian manifold The Hamiltonian in this case is known as a sub Riemannian Hamiltonian Every such Hamiltonian uniquely determines the cometric and vice versa This implies that every sub Riemannian manifold is uniquely determined by its sub Riemannian Hamiltonian and that the converse is true every sub Riemannian manifold has a unique sub Riemannian Hamiltonian The existence of sub Riemannian geodesics is given by the Chow Rashevskii theorem The continuous real valued Heisenberg group provides a simple example of a sub Riemannian manifold For the Heisenberg group the Hamiltonian is given byH x y z p x p y p z 1 2 p x 2 p y 2 displaystyle mathcal H left x y z p x p y p z right tfrac 1 2 left p x 2 p y 2 right nbsp pz is not involved in the Hamiltonian Poisson algebras edit Hamiltonian systems can be generalized in various ways Instead of simply looking at the algebra of smooth functions over a symplectic manifold Hamiltonian mechanics can be formulated on general commutative unital real Poisson algebras A state is a continuous linear functional on the Poisson algebra equipped with some suitable topology such that for any element A of the algebra A2 maps to a nonnegative real number A further generalization is given by Nambu dynamics Generalization to quantum mechanics through Poisson bracket edit Hamilton s equations above work well for classical mechanics but not for quantum mechanics since the differential equations discussed assume that one can specify the exact position and momentum of the particle simultaneously at any point in time However the equations can be further generalized to then be extended to apply to quantum mechanics as well as to classical mechanics through the deformation of the Poisson algebra over p and q to the algebra of Moyal brackets Specifically the more general form of the Hamilton s equation readsd f d t f H f t displaystyle frac mathrm d f mathrm d t left f mathcal H right frac partial f partial t nbsp where f is some function of p and q and H is the Hamiltonian To find out the rules for evaluating a Poisson bracket without resorting to differential equations see Lie algebra a Poisson bracket is the name for the Lie bracket in a Poisson algebra These Poisson brackets can then be extended to Moyal brackets comporting to an inequivalent Lie algebra as proven by Hilbrand J Groenewold and thereby describe quantum mechanical diffusion in phase space See the phase space formulation and the Wigner Weyl transform This more algebraic approach not only permits ultimately extending probability distributions in phase space to Wigner quasi probability distributions but at the mere Poisson bracket classical setting also provides more power in helping analyze the relevant conserved quantities in a system See also editCanonical transformation Classical field theory Hamiltonian field theory Covariant Hamiltonian field theory Classical mechanics Dynamical systems theory Hamiltonian system Hamilton Jacobi equation Hamilton Jacobi Einstein equation Lagrangian mechanics Maxwell s equations Hamiltonian quantum mechanics Quantum Hamilton s equations Quantum field theory Hamiltonian optics De Donder Weyl theory Geometric mechanics Routhian mechanics Nambu mechanics Hamiltonian fluid mechanics Hamiltonian vector fieldReferences edit Hamilton William Rowan Sir 1833 On a general method of expressing the paths of light amp of the planets by the coefficients of a characteristic function Printed by P D Hardy OCLC 68159539 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Landau amp Lifshitz 1976 pp 33 34 This derivation is along the lines as given in Arnol d 1989 pp 65 66 Goldstein Poole amp Safko 2002 pp 347 349 Zinn Justin Jean Guida Riccardo 2008 12 04 Gauge invariance Scholarpedia 3 12 8287 Bibcode 2008SchpJ 3 8287Z doi 10 4249 scholarpedia 8287 ISSN 1941 6016 Arnol d Kozlov amp Neĩshtadt 1988 3 Hamiltonian mechanics Arnol d Kozlov amp Neĩshtadt 1988Further reading editLandau Lev Davidovich Lifshitz Evgenii Mikhailovich 1976 Mechanics Course of Theoretical Physics Vol 1 Sykes J B John Bradbury Bell J S 3rd ed Oxford ISBN 0 08 021022 8 OCLC 2591126 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Abraham R Marsden J E 1978 Foundations of mechanics 2d ed rev enl and reset ed Reading Mass Benjamin Cummings Pub Co ISBN 0 8053 0102 X OCLC 3516353 Arnol d V I Kozlov V V Neĩshtadt A I 1988 Mathematical aspects of classical and celestial mechanics Encyclopaedia of Mathematical Sciences Dynamical Systems III Vol 3 Anosov D V Berlin Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 17002 2 OCLC 16404140 Arnol d V I 1989 Mathematical methods of classical mechanics 2nd ed New York Springer Verlag ISBN 0 387 96890 3 OCLC 18681352 Goldstein Herbert Poole Charles P Jr Safko John L 2002 Classical mechanics 3rd ed San Francisco Addison Wesley ISBN 0 201 31611 0 OCLC 47056311 Vinogradov A M Kupershmidt B A 1977 08 31 The structure of Hamiltonian mechanics Russian Mathematical Surveys 32 4 177 243 Bibcode 1977RuMaS 32 177V doi 10 1070 RM1977v032n04ABEH001642 ISSN 0036 0279 S2CID 250805957 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hamiltonian mechanics Binney James J Classical Mechanics lecture notes PDF University of Oxford retrieved 27 October 2010 Tong David Classical Dynamics Cambridge lecture notes University of Cambridge retrieved 27 October 2010 Hamilton William Rowan On a General Method in Dynamics Trinity College Dublin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hamiltonian mechanics amp oldid 1186092275, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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