Transcript Mechanics
Mechanics
Cartesian Coordinates
Normal space has three
coordinates.
x1, x2, x3
Replace x, y, z
Usual right-handed system
x3
r
e1
A vector can be expressed in
coordinates, or from a basis.
Unit vectors form a basis
r ( x1 , x 2 , x 3 )
3
1
2
3
r x e1 x e2 x e3 x i ei x i ei
i 1
Summation convention
x1
x2
Cartesian Algebra
Vector algebra requires vector
multiplication.
Wedge product
Usual 3D cross product
a b e ijk ai b j ek
The dot product gives a scalar
from Cartesian vectors.
a b ai bi
Kronecker delta:
dij = 1, i = j
dij = 0, i ≠ j
Permutation epsilon:
eijk = 0, any i, j, k the same
eijk = 1, if i, j, k an even
permutation of 1, 2, 3
eijk = -1, if i, j, k an odd
permutation of 1, 2, 3
e ijke klm d ild jm d imd jl
Coordinate Transformation
A vector can be described by
many Cartesian coordinate
systems.
x3
x3
x2
Transform from one system to
another
Transformation matrix M
x2
x1
x1
x j M ij xi
xi M ij x j
A physical property that transforms
like this is a Cartesian vector.
Systems
A system of particles has f = 3N coordinates.
Each Cartesian coordinate has two indices: xil
i =1 of N particles
l =1 of 3 coordinate indices
A set of generalized coordinates can be used to replace
the Cartesian coordinates.
qm = qm(x11,…, xN3, t)
xil = xil(q1, …, qf, t)
Generalized coordinates need not be distances
General Transformation
Coordinate transformations
can be expressed for small
changes.
xi
dxi m dq m
q
The partial derivatives can be
expressed as a transformation
matrix.
xi l
J m
q
l
l
Jacobian matrix
xi
0
m
q
l
A non-zero determinant of the
transformation matrix
guarantees an inverse
transformation.
q m l
dq l dxi
xi
m
Generalized Velocity
Velocity is considered
independent of position.
Differentials dqm do not
depend on qm
x
dxi im dq m
q
l
l
time fixed
The complete derivative may
be time dependent.
x
x
xi im q m i
q
t
A general rule allows the
cancellation of time in the
partial derivative.
xi
xi
q m q m
The total kinetic energy comes
from a sum over velocities.
T
l
l
l
l
time varying
l
1
2
m (q
j
j
general identity
j 2
)
Generalized Force
Conservative force derives
from a potential V.
V
Fil l
xi
x
Qm Fil im
q
i
l
Generalized force derives from
the same potential.
V x
Qm l im
i xi q
l
Qm
V
q m
Lagrangian
d T
T
V
Q
m
dt q m q m
q m
d T
d V
T
V
0
m
m
m
m
dt q
dt q
q
q
A purely conservative force
depends only on position.
Zero velocity derivatives
Non-conservative forces kept
separately
d (T V ) (T V )
0
m
m
dt q
q
A Lagrangian function is
defined: L = T V.
d L
L
0
m
m
dt q
q
The Euler-Lagrange equations
express Newton’s laws of
motion.
Generalized Momentum
The generalized momentum is
defined from the Lagrangian.
The Euler-Lagrange equations
can be written in terms of p.
The Jacobian integral E is
used to define the Hamiltonian.
Constant when time not
explicit
p j (q j , q j )
p j
L
q j
d L
L
dt q j q j
E
L j
q L
j
q
H
L j
q L p j q j L
q j
Canonical Equations
The independence from velocity defines a new function.
The Hamiltonian functional H(q, p, t)
H p j q j L
These are Hamilton’s canonical conjugate equations.
dp j
H
j
q
dt
H dq j
p j
dt
H
L
t
t
Space Trajectory
Motion along a trajectory is
described by position and
momentum.
x3
Position uses an origin
References the trajectory
p
Momentum points along the
trajectory.
Tangent to the trajectory
The two vectors describe the
motion with 6 coordinates.
Can be generalized
r
x1
x2
Phase Trajectory
The generalized position and
momentum are conjugate
variables.
Ellipse for simple harmonic
Spiral for damped harmonic
6N-dimensional G-space
p
A trajectory is the intersection
of 6N-1 constraints.
q
Undamped
Damped
The product of the conjugate
variables is a phase space
volume.
Equivalent to action S q j p j
Pendulum Space
The trajectory of a pendulum is
on a circle.
Configuration space
Velocity tangent at each point
S1
V1
q
Together the phase space is 2dimensional.
A tangent bundle
1-d position, 1-d velocity
V1
S1
Phase Portrait
A series of phase curves corresponding to different energies
make up a phase portrait.
Velocity for Lagrangian system
Momentum for Hamiltonian system
p
q,
E>2
E<2
E=2
q
A simple pendulum
forms a series of
curves.
Potential energy
normalized to be 1
at horizontal
Phase Flow
A region of phase space will
evolve over time.
Large set of points
Consider conservative system
p
t t2
t t1
The region can be
characterized by a phase
space density.
q
N dV
dV dq j dp j
j
Differential Flow
in
dq j
dt
dp j
dp j
dt
dq j
out
q j
p j
q j
dq j dp j p j
dp j dq j
q j
p j
q j p j
dq jdp j
dq jdp j
t
p j
q j
q j
p j
q j
p j
0
t
q j p j
p j
j
q j
The change in phase space
can be viewed from the flow.
Flow in
Flow out
Sum the net flow over all
variables.
p
q j dp
j
dq j
p j
q
Liouville’s Theorem
Hamilton’s equations can be
combined to simplify the phase
space expression.
H
p j
q j
p j
p j
This gives the total time
derivative of the phase space
density.
Conserved over time
H
q j
p j
q j
q j
0
q j
p j 0
t
p j
j
q j
d
0
dt
Ergodic Hypothesis
p
q,
E>2
E<2
E=2
q
The phase trajectories for
the pendulum form closed
curves in G-space.
The curve consists of all
points at the same energy.
A system whose phase
trajectory covers all points
at an energy is ergodic.
Energy defines all states
of the system
Defines dynamic
equilibrium
Spherical Pendulum
A spherical pendulum has a
spherical configuration space.
S2
Trajectory is a closed curve
The phase space is a set of all
possible velocities.
Each in a 2-d tangent plane
Complete 4-d G-space
S2
The energy surface is 3-d.
Phase trajectories don’t cross
Don’t span the surface
x
V2
Non-Ergodic Systems
The spherical pendulum is non-ergodic.
A phase trajectory does not reach all energy points
Two-dimensional harmonic oscillator with commensurate
periods is non-ergodic.
Many simple systems in multiple dimensions are nonergodic.
Energy is insufficient to define all states of a system.
Quasi-Ergodic Hypothesis
Equilibrium of the distribution
of states of a system required
ergodicity.
A revised definition only
requires the phase trajectory to
come arbitrarily close to any
point at an energy.
This defines a quasi-ergodic
system.
Quasi-Ergodic Definition
Define a phase trajectory on
an energy (hyper)surface.
Point g(pi, qi) on the trajectory
Arbitrary point g’ on the
surface
The difference is arbitrarily
small.
g ( pi pi , qi qi )
pi e i
qi d i
Zero for ergodic system
g ( pi , qi )
g ( pi pi , qi qi )
Coarse Grain
A probability density can be
translated to a probability P.
Defined at each point
Based on volume l
P(g ) l
P(g ) l
The difference only matters if
the properties are significantly
different.
l
Relevance depends on ei, di
A coarse-grain approach
becomes nearly quasi-ergodic.
Integrals become sums
l
A ( pi , qi ) A( pi , qi )dl
A ( pi , qi ) A( pi , qi ) p j q j
g
j