4.II.15C

Classical Dynamics
Part II, 2007

The Hamiltonian for an oscillating particle with one degree of freedom is

H=p22m+V(q,λ)H=\frac{p^{2}}{2 m}+V(q, \lambda)

The mass mm is a constant, and λ\lambda is a function of time tt alone. Write down Hamilton's equations and use them to show that

dHdt=Hλdλdt\frac{d H}{d t}=\frac{\partial H}{\partial \lambda} \frac{d \lambda}{d t}

Now consider a case in which λ\lambda is constant and the oscillation is exactly periodic. Denote the constant value of HH in that case by EE. Consider the quantity I=I= (2π)1pdq(2 \pi)^{-1} \oint p d q, where the integral is taken over a single oscillation cycle. For any given function V(q,λ)V(q, \lambda) show that II can be expressed as a function of EE and λ\lambda alone, namely

I=I(E,λ)=(2m)1/22π(EV(q,λ))1/2dqI=I(E, \lambda)=\frac{(2 m)^{1 / 2}}{2 \pi} \oint(E-V(q, \lambda))^{1 / 2} d q

where the sign of the integrand alternates between the two halves of the oscillation cycle. Let τ\tau be the period of oscillation. Show that the function I(E,λ)I(E, \lambda) has partial derivatives

IE=τ2π and Iλ=12πVλdt\frac{\partial I}{\partial E}=\frac{\tau}{2 \pi} \quad \text { and } \quad \frac{\partial I}{\partial \lambda}=-\frac{1}{2 \pi} \oint \frac{\partial V}{\partial \lambda} d t

You may assume without proof that /E\partial / \partial E and /λ\partial / \partial \lambda may be taken inside the integral.

Now let λ\lambda change very slowly with time tt, by a negligible amount during an oscillation cycle. Assuming that, to sufficient approximation,

dHdt=Hλdλdt\frac{d\langle H\rangle}{d t}=\frac{\partial\langle H\rangle}{\partial \lambda} \frac{d \lambda}{d t}

where H\langle H\rangle is the average value of HH over an oscillation cycle, and that

dIdt=IEdHdt+Iλdλdt\frac{d I}{d t}=\frac{\partial I}{\partial E} \frac{d\langle H\rangle}{d t}+\frac{\partial I}{\partial \lambda} \frac{d \lambda}{d t}

deduce that dI/dt=0d I / d t=0, carefully explaining your reasoning.

When

V(q,λ)=λq2nV(q, \lambda)=\lambda q^{2 n}

with nn a positive integer and λ\lambda positive, deduce that

H=Cλ1/(n+1)\langle H\rangle=C \lambda^{1 /(n+1)}

for slowly-varying λ\lambda, where CC is a constant.

[Do not try to solve Hamilton's equations. Rather, consider the form taken by II. ]