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HamiltonJacobi equation

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In mathematics, the HamiltonJacobi equation (HJE) is a necessary condition describing extremal geometry in generalizations of problems from the calculus of variations, and is a special case of the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation. It is named for William Rowan Hamilton and Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi. In physics, it is a formulation of classical mechanics, equivalent to other formulations such as Newton's laws of motion, Lagrangian mechanics and Hamiltonian mechanics. The HamiltonJacobi equation is particularly useful in identifying conserved quantities for mechanical systems, which may be possible even when the mechanical problem itself cannot be solved completely. The HJE is also the only formulation of mechanics in which the motion of a particle can be represented as a wave. In this sense, the HJE fulfilled a long-held goal of theoretical physics (dating at least to Johann Bernoulli in the 18th century) of finding an analogy between the propagation of light and the motion of a particle. The wave equation followed by mechanical systems is similar to, but not identical with, Schrdinger's equation, as described below; for this reason, the HJE is considered the "closest approach" of classical mechanics to quantum mechanics.[1][2]

Contents
1 Mathematical formulation 1.1 Notation 2 Comparison with other formulations of mechanics 3 Derivation 4 Action and Hamilton's functions 5 Separation of variables 6 Examples in various coordinate systems 6.1 Spherical coordinates 6.2 Elliptic cylindrical coordinates 6.3 Parabolic cylindrical coordinates 7 Eikonal approximation and relationship to the Schrdinger equation 8 HJE in a gravitational field 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading

Mathematical formulation
The HamiltonJacobi equation is a first-order, non-linear partial differential equation[3]

where

is the classical Hamiltonian function,

is called Hamilton's principal function (also the action, see below), qi are the N generalized coordinates (i = 1,2...N) which define the configuration of the system, and t is time. As described below, this equation may be derived from Hamiltonian mechanics by treating S as the generating function for a canonical transformation of the classical Hamiltonian

The conjugate momenta correspond to the first derivatives of S with respect to the generalized coordinates

As a solution to the HamiltonJacobi equation, the principal function contains N + 1 undetermined constants, the first N of them denoted as 1, 2 ... . N, and the last one coming from the integration of The relationship between p and q then describes the orbit in phase space in terms of these constants of motion. Furthermore, the quantities

are also constants of motion, and these equations can be inverted to find q as a function of all the and constants and time.[4]

Notation
For brevity, we use boldface variables such as q to represent the list (tuple) of N generalized coordinates, similarly for the generalized momenta:

that need not transform like a vector under rotation. The dot product is defined here as the sum of the products of corresponding components, i.e.,

Comparison with other formulations of mechanics


The HJE is a single, first-order partial differential equation for the function S of the N generalized coordinates q1...qN and the time t . The generalized momenta do not appear, except as derivatives of S. Remarkably, the function S is equal to the classical action. For comparison, in the equivalent EulerLagrange equations of motion of Lagrangian mechanics, the conjugate momenta also do not appear; however, those equations are a system of N, generally second-order equations for the time evolution of the generalized coordinates. Similarly, Hamilton's equations of motion are another system of 2N first-order equations for the time evolution of the generalized coordinates and their conjugate momenta p1...pN. Since the HJE is an equivalent expression of an integral minimization problem such as Hamilton's principle, the HJE can be useful in other problems of the calculus of variations and, more generally, in other branches of mathematics and physics, such as dynamical systems, symplectic geometry and quantum chaos. For example, the HamiltonJacobi equations can be used to determine the geodesics on a Riemannian manifold, an important variational problem in Riemannian geometry.

Derivation
Any canonical transformation involving a type-2 generating function G2(q, P, t ) leads to the relations

and Hamilton's equations in terms of the new variables P, Q and new Hamiltonian K have the same form:

To derive the HJE, we choose a generating function G2(q, P, t ) that makes the new Hamiltonian K = 0. Hence, all its derivatives are also zero, and the transformed Hamilton's equations become trivial

so the new generalized coordinates and momenta are constants of motion. As they are constants, in this context the new generalized momenta P are usually denoted 1, 2 ... N, i.e. Pm = m, and the new generalized coordinates Q are typically denoted as 1, 2 ... N, so Qm = m. Setting the generating function equal to Hamilton's principal function, plus an arbitrary constant A:

the HJE automatically arises:

Once we have solved for S(q, , t ), these also give us the useful equations

or written in components for clarity

Ideally, these N equations can be inverted to find the original generalized coordinates q as a function of the constants , and t , thus solving the original problem.

Action and Hamilton's functions


Hamilton's principal function S and classical function H are both closely related to action. The total differential of S is:

so the time derivative of S is

Therefore

so S is actually the classical action plus an undetermined constant. When H does not explicitly depend on time,

in this case W is the same as abbreviated action.

Separation of variables
The HJE is most useful when it can be solved via additive separation of variables, which directly identifies constants of motion. For example, the time in the HJE must be a constant, usually t can be separated if the Hamiltonian does not depend on time explicitly. In that case, the time derivative denoted (E), giving the separated solution

where the time-independent function W(q) is sometimes called Hamilton's characteristic function. The reduced HamiltonJacobi equation can then be written

To illustrate separability for other variables, we assume that a certain generalized coordinate qk and its derivative function

appear together as a single

in the Hamiltonian

In that case, the function S can be partitioned into two functions, one that depends only on qk and another that depends only on the remaining generalized coordinates

Substitution of these formulae into the HamiltonJacobi equation shows that the function must be a constant (denoted here as k ), yielding a firstorder ordinary differential equation for Sk (qk )

In fortunate cases, the function S can be separated completely into N functions Sm(qm)

In such a case, the problem devolves to N ordinary differential equations. The separability of S depends both on the Hamiltonian and on the choice of generalized coordinates. For orthogonal coordinates and Hamiltonians that have no time dependence and are quadratic in the generalized momenta, S will be completely separable if the potential energy is additively separable in each coordinate, where the potential energy term for each coordinate is multiplied by the coordinate-dependent factor in the corresponding momentum term of the Hamiltonian (the Staeckel conditions ). For illustration, several examples in orthogonal coordinates are worked in the next sections.

Examples in various coordinate systems


Further information: Coordinate system, Orthogonal coordinates, and Curvilinear coordinates

Spherical coordinates
In spherical coordinates the Hamiltonian of a free particle moving in a conservative potential U can be written

The HamiltonJacobi equation is completely separable in these coordinates provided that there exist functions Ur(r), U() and U() such that U can be written in the analogous form

Substitution of the completely separated solution

into the HJE yields

This equation may be solved by successive integrations of ordinary differential equations, beginning with the equation for

where is a constant of the motion that eliminates the dependence from the HamiltonJacobi equation

The next ordinary differential equation involves the generalized coordinate

where is again a constant of the motion that eliminates the dependence and reduces the HJE to the final ordinary differential equation

whose integration completes the solution for S.

Elliptic cylindrical coordinates


The Hamiltonian in elliptic cylindrical coordinates can be written

where the foci of the ellipses are located at a on the x -axis. The HamiltonJacobi equation is completely separable in these coordinates provided that U has an analogous form

where U(), U () and Uz(z) are arbitrary functions. Substitution of the completely separated solution into the HJE yields

Separating the first ordinary differential equation

yields the reduced HamiltonJacobi equation (after re-arrangement and multiplication of both sides by the denominator)

which itself may be separated into two independent ordinary differential equations

that, when solved, provide a complete solution for S.

Parabolic cylindrical coordinates


The Hamiltonian in parabolic cylindrical coordinates can be written

The HamiltonJacobi equation is completely separable in these coordinates provided that U has an analogous form

where U(), U() and Uz(z) are arbitrary functions. Substitution of the completely separated solution

into the HJE yields

Separating the first ordinary differential equation

yields the reduced HamiltonJacobi equation (after re-arrangement and multiplication of both sides by the denominator)

which itself may be separated into two independent ordinary differential equations

that, when solved, provide a complete solution for S.

Eikonal approximation and relationship to the Schrdinger equation


Further information: Eikonal approximation and Non-linear Schrdinger equation

The isosurfaces of the function S(q; t ) can be determined at any time t . The motion of an S-isosurface as a function of time is defined by the motions of the particles beginning at the points q on the isosurface. The motion of such an isosurface can be thought of as a wave moving through q space, although it does not obey the wave equation exactly. To show this, let S represent the phase of a wave

where is a constant (Planck's constant) introduced to make the exponential argument unitless; changes in the amplitude of the wave can be represented by having S be a complex number. We may then rewrite the HamiltonJacobi equation as

which is a nonlinear variant of the Schrdinger equation. Conversely, starting with the Schrdinger equation and our ansatz for , we arrive at[5]

The classical limit ( 0) of the Schrdinger equation above becomes identical to the following variant of the HamiltonJacobi equation,

HJE in a gravitational field


Using the energymomentum relation in the form;[6]

for a particle of rest mass m travelling in curved space, where g are the contravariant coordinates of the metric tensor (i.e., the inverse metric) solved from the Einstein field equations, and c is the speed of light, setting the four-momentum P equal to the four-gradient of the action S;

gives the HamiltonJacobi equation in the geometry determined by the metric g:

in other words, in a gravitational field.

See also
Canonical transformation Constant of motion Hamiltonian vector field HamiltonJacobiBellman equation in control theory HamiltonJacobiEinstein equation WKB approximation William Rowan Hamilton Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi Action-angle coordinates

References
1. ^ Goldstein, pp. 484492, particularly the discussion beginning in the last paragraph of page 491. 2. ^ Sakurai, pp. 103107. 3. ^ Analytical Mechanics, L.N. Hand, J.D. Finch, Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-521-57572-0

4. ^ Herbert Goldstein, Classical Mechanics, 2nd ed. (Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley, 1981), p. 440. 5. ^ Goldstein, pp. 490491. 6. ^ J.A. Wheeler, C. Misner, K.S. Thorne (1973). Gravitation. W.H. Freeman & Co. p. 649. ISBN 0-7167-0344-0.

Further reading
Hamilton, W. (1833). "On a General Method of Expressing the Paths of Light, and of the Planets, by the Coefficients of a Characteristic Function" (http://www.emis.de/classics/Hamilton/CharFun.pdf). Dublin University Review: 795826. Hamilton, W. (1834). "On the Application to Dynamics of a General Mathematical Method previously Applied to Optics" (http://www.emis.de/classics/Hamilton/BARep34A.pdf). British Association Report : 513518. Goldstein, H. (2002). Classical Mechanics. Addison Wesley. ISBN 0-201-65702-3. Fetter, A. & Walecka, J. (2003). Theoretical Mechanics of Particles and Continua. Dover Books. ISBN 0-486-43261-0. Landau, L. D.; Lifshitz, L. M. (1975). Mechanics. Amsterdam: Elsevier. Sakurai, J. J. (1985). Modern Quantum Mechanics. Benjamin/Cummings Publishing. ISBN 0-8053-7501-5. Jacobi, C. G. J. (1884), Vorlesungen ber Dynamik (http://openlibrary.org/books/OL14009561M/C._G._J._Jacobi%27s_Vorlesungen_u%CC%88ber_Dynamik), C. G. J. Jacobi's Gesammelte Werke (in German), Berlin: G. Reimer Nakane, Michiyo; Fraser, Craig G. (2002). "The Early History of Hamilton-Jacobi Dynamics". Centaurus (Wiley). doi:10.1111/j.16000498.2002.tb00613.x (http://dx.doi.org/10.1111%2Fj.1600-0498.2002.tb00613.x). Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=HamiltonJacobi_equation&oldid=561674952" Categories: Hamiltonian mechanics Symplectic geometry Partial differential equations This page was last modified on 26 June 2013 at 14:17. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.

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