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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
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            