
PHYS3002 — Classical Mechanics M. J. Hole - based on a lecture course by R. L. Dewar [email protected] Department of Theoretical Physics Le Couteur Building (Building 59) Research School of Physical Sciences & Engineering Telephone 57606 Course notes (.pdf) and announcements will be available from http:// wwwrsphysse.anu.edu.au/∼hol105/C02 ClassMech/C02.html Read appropriate sections before each class. Print only part you need for present . will be revised en-route. Assessment: 70% exam 30% assignments? Assignments: 4 assignments worth 7.5% each. Due in Tuesday at 10am. Tutorials: Given by Brian Kenny. 1-2 qns + help with lecture notes. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Topics Covered in CM3001. • Principal of least action • Hamilton’s principle • Lagrangian Dynamics • Euler-Lagrange equation + applications • Noethers’ Thereom • Hamilton’s equations • Poisson brackets •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit 1. Overview, and generalized Kinematics • Overview • Generalized co-ordinates and configuration space. • Variational Calculus : Euler-Lagrange equations • Constrained Variation : Lagrange Multipliers 2. Derivation of Lagrangian Mechanics : Principle of Least Action. • Hamilton’s principle. • Review derivation of Lagrangian mechanics: principle of Least ac- tion. 3. Derivation of Lagrangian Mechanics : Generalization of Newtons 2nd law. • Lagrangian mechanics from generalization of Newtons 2nd law. • Noethers theorem • Point and gauge transformations •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit 4. Examples of Lagrangian Mechanics • brachistochrone • pendulum • examples from special relativity 5. Dynamical Systems and Hamiltonian Mechanics • approximate action principle • adiabatic invariance • dynamical systems • Hamiltonian mechanics + examples 6. Hamiltonian Transformations and Phase Portraits • point and gauge transformations : Hamiltonian • phase portraits •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit 7. Hamiltonian Mechanics : Examples • rigid rotor problem • particle in symmetric B field • picket fence confinement 8. Phase Space Formulation • Phase-space Lagrangian • modified Hamilton’s principle • gauge, point and canonical transformations in phase space • generating functions 9. Transition to Chaos • KAM Theorem and destruction of invariant torii • example : kicked rotor • standard, Poincare and Sympletic map •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit 10. Hamilton-Jacobi Theory • Hamilton-Jacobi equation for Hamilton’s principal function • Hamilton-Jacobi equation for Hamilton’s characteristic function • example : harmonic oscillator 11. Canonical Transformations Revisited, and Action an- gle variables • incompressible Hamiltonian flows • invariant sets in dynamical systems • Action-angle variables • invariant tori in integrable systems 12. Revision •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit 13. Time permitting: Perturbation Theory • identity transformation • identity connected transformation • infinitesimal canonical transformation • time evolution and stroboscopic map • Poisson bracket formulation • Van Zeipel’s perturbation theory • Lie transform method •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Why study Classical Mechanics? • Unified description of all classical (non-quantum) physics, chem- istry and engineering. E.g. – celestial mechanics (motion of stars, planets and satellites) – plasma physics - particle orbits in complicated magnetic geom- etry (eg fusion plasmas) – molecular dynamics – mechanical (& electrical) engineering • Provides formal infrastructure for the development of quantum me- chanics. • Beautiful in its own right: Again and again [I have] experienced the extraordinary elation of mind which accompanies a preoc- cupation with the basic principles and methods of analytical mechanics. — Cornelius Lanczos 1949 •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit History • 16, 17th C: Particle Kinematics, Force and Momentum Vectors, Gravity, . : Galileo, Newton, . • 18th C: Configuration Space Description, Energy, Variational Prin- ciples, . : Euler, Lagrange . • 19th C: Phase Space Description, Electrodynamics, Statistical Me- chanics, . : Hamilton, Maxwell, Boltzmann, Gibbs . • 20th C: Integrability, Symmetry, Dynamical Systems Theory, Chaos, . : Poincar´e,Einstein, Kovalevskaya, Noether, Kol- morogorov, Arnol’d, Moser . • 21st C: Simulation, Visualization, Complexity, Biodynamics, . ?: Your turn! •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Euler • Leonhard Euler was born 15 April 1707 in Basel, Switzerland. He died 18 September 1783 in St Petersburg, Russia. • His book Mechanica (1736-37), extensively presented Newtonian dynamics in the form of mathematical analysis for the first time, and started Euler on the way to major mathematical work. • He studied continuum mechanics, lunar theory with Clairaut, the three body problem, elasticity, acoustics, the wave theory of light, hydraulics, and music. He laid the foundation of analytical me- chanics, especially in his Theory of the Motions of Rigid Bodies (1765). • We owe to Euler the notation f(x) for a function (1734), e for the base of natural logs (1727), i for the square root of −1 (1777), π for pi, P for summation (1755), the notation for finite differences ∆y and ∆2y and many others. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Leonhard Euler He produced half his works after he became totally blind. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Lagrange • Joseph-Louis Lagrange (Lagrangia) was born 25 Jan 1736 in Turin, Sardinia-Piedmont (now Italy). He died 10 April 1813 in Paris, France. • Lagrange based his early development on the principle of least ac- tion and on kinetic energy. He corresponded with Euler, who finally persuaded him to move to Berlin, where he worked for 20 years, pro- ducing a steady stream of top quality papers and regularly winning prizes from the Acad´emiedes Sciences of Paris. • His M´echaniqueanalytique (1788) summarised all the work done in the field of mechanics since the time of Newton and is notable for its use of the theory of differential equations. With this work Lagrange transformed mechanics into a branch of mathematical analysis. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Joseph-Louis Lagrange In 1787 he left Berlin to become a member of the Acad´emie des Sciences in Paris, where he remained for the rest of his career. He was saved from arrest as an enemy alien during the Reign of Terror by Lavoisier (who wasn’t so lucky himself—he was guillotined). •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Generalized Coordinates • Suppose force Fi(r, r˙, t), i = 1, 2, 3 acts on a particle of mass m. If coordinate system is Cartesian, then the equations of motion are the set of three second-order differential equations mx¨i − Fi = 0. • Consider a set of N Newtonian point masses interacting by var- ious forces. There are then 3N equations of motion. Dynamics of a particle described in a 3N dimensional configuration space with generalized coordinates q1, ..., q3N . No particular metric is assumed. • Whether the point masses are real particles like electrons, composite particles like nuclei or atoms, or mathematical idealizations like the infinitesimal volume elements in a continuum description, we shall refer to them generically as “particles”. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Configuration Space q2 q(t ) z r 2 r y q(t) θ q(t1) φ q x 1 q ... q 3 n Big conceptual advance: Instead of thinking of a system as being made up of many points in 3-space, think of it as one point in the n- dimensional configuration space of the generalized coordinates. As time t changes, the point sweeps out a path through confuration space. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Holonomic Constraints In general, the dimensionality n of the configuration space for an N- particle system in 3-space is 3N − m, where m is the number of holo- nomic constraints, fj(q) = 0 , j = 1, 2, ··· , m < 3N. (1) Example 1: Two particles are connected by a rigid rod so they are constrained to move a fixed distance apart. Let the position of particle 1 with respect to a stationary Cartesian frame be {x1, y1, z1} and that of particle 2 be {x2, y2, z2}. The rigid rod constraint equation is then 2 2 2 2 (x1 − x2) + (y1 − y2) + (z1 − z2) = l . (2) Eq. 2 is a holonomic constraint, which reduces the number of degrees of freedom from 6 to 5. Degrees of freedom could be taken be position of particle 1, {x1, y1, z1}, and the spherical polar angles θ and φ. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Example 2: The ideal fluid Consider a fluid with density ρ(r, t), presure p(r, t) and velocity v(r, t) fields. Two different descriptions are, Eulerian: fields indexed by actual positition, r, and time t. Lagrangian: fields indexed by initial positition, r0, of particle passing through point r = x(r0, t). • x(r0, t) can be regarded as an infinite set of generalized coordinates. • volume elements related by Jacobian J(r0, t): dV = J(r0, t)dV0. • mass conservation, equation of state act as holonomic constraints → ρ, p are not additional generalized coordinates. x(r0,t) r0 A fluid element advected from point r = r0 at time t = 0 to r = x(r0, t) at time t. •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Variation of paths in configuration space • Assume that the dimensionality n of the configuration space of generalized coordinates q = {q1, q2, . , qn} has been reduced to a minimim by taking into account all holonomic constraints. q2 • Consider arbitrary variations of the path between two fixed initial and final points. q(t2) q(t) q(t1) q1 q ... q 3 n •First •Prev •Next •Last •Go Back •Full Screen •Close •Quit Variational Calculus Consider an objective functional I[q], defined on the space of all dif- ferentiable paths between two points in configuration space, q(t1) and q(t2) Z t2 I[q] ≡ dt f(q(t), q˙ (t), t) . (3) t1 Making arbitrary variations δq(t) in the path and integrating by parts gives Z t2 ∂f ∂f δI[q] ≡ dt δq(t)· + δq˙ (t)· t1 ∂q ∂q˙ t ∂f 2 Z t2 δf = δq· + dt δq(t)· , (4) ∂q˙ δq t1 t1 where δf ∂f d ∂f ≡ − .
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