0

Given a conservative mechanical system written in (for example) Newtonian form:

$m \ddot x= -\nabla U(x)$ (so the potential has only a "positional" dependence)

then we know that given the Lagrangian: $L(x,\dot x)=T-U \ $ then the admissible motions for the system are given by extremal points of the action of $L \ $.

Now, if we take the Hamiltonian of the Lagrangian (i.e. its Legendre transform) then we have the Hamilton's equations. I have three questions:

  1. Is it true that the admissible motions for the system are given by the solutions of Hamilton's equations?
  2. If $1$ is true, then is also true that every (Newtonian) conservative system is also volume preserving?
  3. This (for now only hypotetic) correspondence between Hamiltonian's solutions and admissible motions, is still valid if the potential is also velocity-dependent or time-dependent (i.e. $U=U(x,\dot x, t)$)?

P.s.I know that probably these are easy questions, but I have them because I've read Liouville preservation volume theorem and also I've read that the Hamiltonian satysfies the hypotesis of Liouville's theorem, and so I am quite impressed that every conservative mech. syst. is volume preserving.

Thank you in advance

HaroldF
  • 139
  • Thank you! If I have a system on N point-like masses under the action of a conservative force, then I can imagine the polygon formed by "connecting" every mass to the others, now I have an area (in E^2, in general a volume in E^n) at the time t=0 which evolves in a certain way. Can I say that this area (volume) is constant with the hypotesis of question 2? – HaroldF Sep 15 '16 at 17:30
  • The volume conservation associated with Liouville's theorem is phase space volume. That doesn't sound like the volume you are talking about. Are you sure that you haven't misunderstood what you were reading? – Lewis Miller Sep 15 '16 at 18:29
  • @LewisMiller oh you're right! I was thinking about a way too exciting result! Yes, so the Hamiltonian preserves the volume in the phase space (so the space of generalized momenta and coordinates). Also the theorem couldn't be true in general (think about gravitational charges around a gravitational center). Now, can i know more about the fact that 3 is false? – HaroldF Sep 15 '16 at 19:04