Hamiltonian system

A Hamiltonian system is a dynamical system governed by Hamilton's equations. In physics, this dynamical system describes the evolution of a physical system such as a planetary system or an electron in an electromagnetic field. These systems can be studied in both Hamiltonian mechanics and dynamical systems theory.

Overview

Informally, a Hamiltonian system is a mathematical formalism developed by Hamilton to describe the evolution equations of a physical system. The advantage of this description is that it gives important insights into the dynamics, even if the initial value problem cannot be solved analytically. One example is the planetary movement of three bodies: while there is no closed-form solution to the general problem, Poincaré showed for the first time that it exhibits deterministic chaos.

Formally, a Hamiltonian system is a dynamical system characterised by the scalar function , also known as the Hamiltonian. The state of the system, , is described by the generalized coordinates and , corresponding to generalized momentum and position respectively. Both and are real-valued vectors with the same dimension N. Thus, the state is completely described by the 2N-dimensional vector

and the evolution equations are given by Hamilton's equations:

The trajectory is the solution of the initial value problem defined by Hamilton's equations and the initial condition .

Time-independent Hamiltonian systems

If the Hamiltonian is not explicitly time-dependent, i.e. if , then the Hamiltonian does not vary with time at all:

derivation

and thus the Hamiltonian is a constant of motion, whose constant equals the total energy of the system: . Examples of such systems are the undamped pendulum, the harmonic oscillator, and dynamical billiards.

Example

An example of a time-independent Hamiltonian system is the harmonic oscillator. Consider the system defined by the coordinates and . Then the Hamiltonian is given by

The Hamiltonian of this system does not depend on time and thus the energy of the system is conserved.

Symplectic structure

One important property of a Hamiltonian dynamical system is that it has a symplectic structure. Writing

the evolution equation of the dynamical system can be written as

where

and IN is the N×N identity matrix.

One important consequence of this property is that an infinitesimal phase-space volume is preserved. A corollary of this is Liouville's theorem, which states that on a Hamiltonian system, the phase-space volume of a closed surface is preserved under time evolution.

where the third equality comes from the divergence theorem.

Examples

See also


This page was last updated at 2023-03-23 02:53 UTC. Update now. View original page.

All our content comes from Wikipedia and under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.


Top

If mathematical, chemical, physical and other formulas are not displayed correctly on this page, please useFirefox or Safari