Geometric mechanics is a branch of mathematics applying particular geometric methods to many areas of mechanics, from mechanics of particles and rigid bodies to fluid mechanics and control theory.
Geometric mechanics applies principally to systems for which the configuration space is a Lie group, or a group of diffeomorphisms, or more generally where some aspect of the configuration space has this group structure. For example, the configuration space of a rigid body such as a satellite is the group of Euclidean motions (translations and rotations in space), while the configuration space for a liquid crystal is the group of diffeomorphisms coupled with an internal state (gauge symmetry or order parameter).
Momentum map and reduction
editOne of the principal ideas of geometric mechanics is reduction, which goes back to Jacobi's elimination of the node in the 3-body problem, but in its modern form is due to K. Meyer (1973) and independently J.E. Marsden and A. Weinstein (1974), both inspired by the work of Smale (1970). Symmetry of a Hamiltonian or Lagrangian system gives rise to conserved quantities, by Noether's theorem, and these conserved quantities are the components of the momentum map J. If P is the phase space and G the symmetry group, the momentum map is a map , and the reduced spaces are quotients of the level sets of J by the subgroup of G preserving the level set in question: for one defines , and this reduced space is a symplectic manifold if is a regular value of J.
Variational principles
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- Hamilton's principle
- Lagrange d'Alembert principle
- Maupertuis' principle of least action
- Euler–Poincaré
- Vakonomic
Geometric integrators
editOne of the important developments arising from the geometric approach to mechanics is the incorporation of the geometry into numerical methods. In particular symplectic and variational integrators are proving particularly accurate for long-term integration of Hamiltonian and Lagrangian systems.
History
editThe term "geometric mechanics" occasionally refers to 17th-century mechanics.[1]
As a modern subject, geometric mechanics has its roots in four works written in the 1960s. These were by Vladimir Arnold (1966), Stephen Smale (1970) and Jean-Marie Souriau (1970), and the first edition of Abraham and Marsden's Foundation of Mechanics (1967). Arnold's fundamental work showed that Euler's equations for the free rigid body are the equations for geodesic flow on the rotation group SO(3) and carried this geometric insight over to the dynamics of ideal fluids, where the rotation group is replaced by the group of volume-preserving diffeomorphisms. Smale's paper on Topology and Mechanics investigates the conserved quantities arising from Noether's theorem when a Lie group of symmetries acts on a mechanical system, and defines what is now called the momentum map (which Smale calls angular momentum), and he raises questions about the topology of the energy-momentum level surfaces and the effect on the dynamics. In his book, Souriau also considers the conserved quantities arising from the action of a group of symmetries, but he concentrates more on the geometric structures involved (for example the equivariance properties of this momentum for a wide class of symmetries), and less on questions of dynamics.
These ideas, and particularly those of Smale were central in the second edition of Foundations of Mechanics (Abraham and Marsden, 1978).
Applications
edit- Computer graphics
- Control theory — see Bloch (2003)
- Liquid Crystals — see Gay-Balmaz, Ratiu, Tronci (2013)
- Magnetohydrodynamics
- Molecular oscillations
- Nonholonomic constraints — see Bloch (2003)
- Nonlinear stability
- Plasmas — see Holm, Marsden, Weinstein (1985)
- Quantum mechanics
- Quantum chemistry — see Foskett, Holm, Tronci (2019)
- Superfluids
- Thermodynamics — see Gay-Balmaz, Yoshimra (2018)
- Trajectory planning for space exploration
- Underwater vehicles
- Variational integrators; see Marsden and West (2001)
References
edit- ^ Sébastien Maronne, Marco Panza. "Euler, Reader of Newton: Mechanics and Algebraic Analysis". In: Raffaelle Pisano. Newton, History and Historical Epistemology of Science, 2014, pp. 12–21.
- Abraham, Ralph; Marsden, Jerrold E. (1978), Foundations of Mechanics (2nd ed.), Addison-Wesley
- Arnold, Vladimir (1966), "Sur la géométrie différentielle des groupes de Lie de dimension infine et ses applications a l'hydrodynamique des fluides parfaits" (PDF), Annales de l'Institut Fourier, 16: 319–361, doi:10.5802/aif.233
- Arnold, Vladimir (1978), Mathematical Methods for Classical Mechanics, Springer-Verlag
- Bloch, Anthony (2003). Nonholonomic Mechanics and Control. Springer-Verlag.
- Foskett, Michael S.; Holm, Darryl D.; Tronci, Cesare (2019). "Geometry of Nonadiabatic Quantum Hydrodynamics". Acta Applicandae Mathematicae. 162 (1): 63–103. arXiv:1807.01031. doi:10.1007/s10440-019-00257-1. S2CID 85531406.
- Gay-Balmaz, Francois; Ratiu, Tudor; Tronci, Cesare (2013). "Equivalent Theories of Liquid Crystal Dynamics". Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. 210 (3): 773–811. arXiv:1102.2918. Bibcode:2013ArRMA.210..773G. doi:10.1007/s00205-013-0673-1. S2CID 14968950.
- Holm, Darryl D.; Marsden, Jerrold E.; Ratiu, Tudor S.; Weinstein, Alan (1985). "Nonlinear stability of fluid and plasma equilibria". Physics Reports. 123 (1–2): 1–116. Bibcode:1985PhR...123....1H. doi:10.1016/0370-1573(85)90028-6.
- Libermann, Paulette; Marle, Charles-Michel (1987). Symplectic geometry and analytical mechanics. Mathematics and its Applications. Vol. 35. Dordrecht: D. Reidel. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-3807-6. ISBN 90-277-2438-5.
- Marsden, Jerrold; Weinstein, Alan (1974), "Reduction of Symplectic Manifolds with Symmetry", Reports on Mathematical Physics, 5 (1): 121–130, Bibcode:1974RpMP....5..121M, doi:10.1016/0034-4877(74)90021-4
- Marsden, Jerrold; Ratiu, Tudor S. (1999). Introduction to mechanics and symmetry. Texts in Applied Mathematics (2 ed.). New York: Springer-Verlag. ISBN 0-387-98643-X.
- Meyer, Kenneth (1973). "Symmetries and integrals in mechanics". Dynamical systems (Proc. Sympos., Univ. Bahia, Salvador, 1971). New York: Academic Press. pp. 259–272.
- Ortega, Juan-Pablo; Ratiu, Tudor S. (2004). Momentum maps and Hamiltonian reduction. Progress in Mathematics. Vol. 222. Birkhauser Boston. ISBN 0-8176-4307-9.
- Smale, Stephen (1970), "Topology and Mechanics I", Inventiones Mathematicae, 10 (4): 305–331, Bibcode:1970InMat..10..305S, doi:10.1007/bf01418778, S2CID 189831616
- Souriau, Jean-Marie (1970), Structure des Systemes Dynamiques, Dunod