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Preview of Ch. 7 Hamilton’s Principle
The use of this abstract calculus of variations in mechanics! More details next time! Hamilton’s Principle Of all of the possible paths of a mechanical system, the path actually followed is the one which minimizes the time integral of the difference in the kinetic & potential energies. That is, the actual path is the one which makes the variation of the following integral vanish: δ∫[T - U] dt = (limits t1 < t < t2)
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δ∫[T - U] dt = 0 (limits t1 < t < t2) (1)
Here: T = T(xi) & U = U(xi), N particles in 3d, i = 1,2, ..(3N) Define: The Lagrangian L L T(xi) - U(xi) = L(xi,xi) (1) δ∫Ldt = (2) This is identical to the abstract calculus of variations problem of Ch. 6 with the replacements: δJ δ∫Ldt , x t , yi(x) xi(t) yi(x) (dxi(t)/dt) = xi(t), f[yi(x),yi(x);x] L(xi,xi;t) (1) The Lagrangian L satisfies Euler’s equations with these replacements!
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The Lagrangian L = L(xi,xi) satisfies Euler’s equations!
δ∫Ldt = 0 (limits t1 < t < t2) (2) The Lagrangian L = L(xi,xi) satisfies Euler’s equations! Or, with the changes noted: (L/xi) - (d/dt)[(L/xi)] = (3) N particles in 3d: i = 1,2, ..(3N) Lagrange Equations of Motion (3) enables us to get equations of motion without (explicitly) using Newton’s 2nd Law!
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