I have recently thought what is the Lagrangian for a harmonic oscillator with damping. For instance, consider the equation of motion
(A) x'' = (-k/m)x - ax'
Actually, the problem arises for a simple Newtonian body moving with friction. If I'm right, many of the readers probabely know this, but the conclusion I arrived at is that there is no Lagrangian. And that's why: assume otherwise, i.e., that the above models may be formulated using a Lagrangian, and therefore, eventually put into a Hamiltonian form. This will automatically yield a conserved quantity (i.e. the energy) which is not something trivial - otherwise, the dynamics would be trivial. Such a conserved quantity simply does not exist for the above models. Another argument comes from the Liouville theorem - damping results in an evident reduction of the volume occupied by the possible states of the oscillator - as these states reduce to x=0, v=0 with time. So, what is the common feature of physically meaningful, but non-Hamiltonian - hence, non-quantizable - models? There is another group of models which come to mind - physics living on manifolds-with-boundary. For instance, a billiard exhibits non-smouthness, and as a consequence, non-"Hamiltonianess". However, these second type non-Hamiltonian models may be APPROXIMATED by Hamiltonian ones - in the billiard case, those would be particles in a shraply rising potential near the walls. Therefore, if we exclude the near-Hamiltonian models, only one type seems to remain - models which describe non-adiabatic - i.e. with heat transfer - procceses. Another example would be the billiard with energy loss added in wall reflections. The Liouville argument shows the entropy changes in these models what again implies them being characterized by non-adiabaticity. This also relates to the possibility of quantizing, which in the usual cases results in unitary, thus information preserving = entropy conserving models. This is, therefore, not surprising that the definition of quantum entropy S = -kTr(rho ln rho) leads to a conserved quantity, even when the Hamiltonian changes with time. This is interesting, how may we describe non-adiabatic models after all, and so, address the issue of quantum entropy.
> I have recently thought what is the Lagrangian for a harmonic oscillator > with damping. For instance, consider the equation of motion
> (A) x'' = (-k/m)x - ax'
> Actually, the problem arises for a simple Newtonian body moving with > friction. If I'm right, many of the readers probabely know this, but the > conclusion I arrived at is that there is no Lagrangian.
How about:
L = 1/2 (m(x')^2 - k x^2) + max't
(I used to think that only adiabatic systems have Lagrangians and Hamiltonians)
> And that's why: > assume otherwise, i.e., that the above models may be formulated using a > Lagrangian, and therefore, eventually put into a Hamiltonian form.
This one fails. The canonical conjugate of x is (mx' + mat)
So the Hamiltonian:
H = 1/2 ( m (x')^2 - k x^2 )
The time dependent term has canceled. I think Hamilitonians indeed only work for energy conserving systems. But Lagrangian systems can be more general.
I remember something about "the principle of minimum power", which is general enough to include dissipation, contrary to the principle of minimum energy.
[..]
> This is interesting, how may we > describe non-adiabatic models after all, and so, address the issue of > quantum entropy.
The non adiabaticity arises when you let heat escape. If you include the heat by modeling the heat explicitly as individual molecules, it becomes adiabatic. The problem is that a "deterministic" model has no entropy. You would have to specify what you pretend you don't know about the system. Then you have to count all systems that could fulfill the requirements set by what you do know.
> The time dependent term has canceled. > I think Hamilitonians indeed only work for energy conserving systems. > But Lagrangian systems can be more general.
Nah. If there is a Lagrangian formulation then there is a Hamiltonian formulation and vice versa. The correspondence is easiest when there are no constraints or the Lagrangian has a non-degenerate Hessian. In that case the usual Legendre transform suffices to move back and forth. In the more general case one can use the methods of Dirac.
Conservation of energy is not required for a Lagrangian/Hamiltonian formulation. For example, one can write down a Lagrangian/Hamiltonian for a charged particle moving in a prescribed time-varying electromagnetic field. The energy of the particle is not, in general, conserved. (Better: there is no conserved quantity that you would like to identify as energy.)
Given a set of DEs, when is there a Lagrangian (or Hamiltonian)? This is a very old problem in mathematics called "the inverse problem in the calculus of variations". A lot is known about it. It goes back at least to Helmholtz!
See for example the paper by Anderson and Thompson, in Memoirs of the AMS, Volume 98, number 473, 1992.
>> The time dependent term has canceled. >> I think Hamilitonians indeed only work for energy conserving systems. >> But Lagrangian systems can be more general.
>Nah. If there is a Lagrangian formulation then there is a >Hamiltonian formulation and vice versa.
I'm not sure this is true. I can write down a Lagrangian with an infinite number of time derivatives. It's rather unclear how to turn this into a Hamiltonian. (This is a particularly perverse case, but not completely without interest.)
-- ====================================================================== Kevin Scaldeferri Calif. Institute of Technology The INTJ's Prayer: Lord keep me open to others' ideas, WRONG though they may be.
In article <8j0e95$...@gap.cco.caltech.edu>, ke...@cco.caltech.edu (Kevin A. Scaldeferri) writes:
> In article <UFS$3V8YH...@cc.usu.edu>, Charles Torre <to...@cc.usu.edu> wrote: >>Nah. If there is a Lagrangian formulation then there is a >>Hamiltonian formulation and vice versa.
> I'm not sure this is true. I can write down a Lagrangian with an > infinite number of time derivatives. It's rather unclear how to turn > this into a Hamiltonian. (This is a particularly perverse case, but > not completely without interest.)
Well, ahem, hmmm. Okay. But you are stretching the definition of "Lagrangian" a bit from its usual one ( I guess I thought that the more or less standard classical mechanics kind of Lagrangian was being discussed). As usual, most disagreements are more about definitions than consequences of definitions. Normally one defines a Lagrangian as a local function of the spacetime coordinates, the dynamical variables and a finite number of their derivatives, which is what I had in mind.
I guess I would call this kind of thing you are mentioning a "non-local Lagrangian". It becomes tricky to say much about these beasts in general except in a very formal, non-rigorous way. What are the Euler-Lagrange equations equations for such a beast? A formal infinite series? How do you know when it converges? Noether's theorem? Etc. I guess I don't see that many of the usual nice tools of Lagrangian dynamics come easily into play when the Lagrangian is non-local. In such cases where these things are appearing, it is probably best to just forget Lagrangians and work at the level of action functionals (that's just a gut feeling of mine).
I would be interested in hearing some more about cases where it is useful to think in terms of Lagrangians with an infinite number of derivatives. Oh. Maybe you are thinking about effective actions in quantum theory? Fair enough. (Still, even though an infinite number of derivatives may arise in a derivative expansion of the "Lagrangian", one usually truncates to a finite number of terms in any perturbative computation. Then what I said still applies.)
> > The time dependent term has canceled. > > I think Hamilitonians indeed only work for energy conserving systems. > > But Lagrangian systems can be more general.
> Nah. If there is a Lagrangian formulation then there is a > Hamiltonian formulation and vice versa. The correspondence is > easiest when there are no constraints or the Lagrangian has a > non-degenerate Hessian. In that case the usual Legendre transform > suffices to move back and forth. In the more general case one can > use the methods of Dirac.
But in squarks example, a term in the Lagrangian in canceled by the Legendre transformation. Thus, the Hamiltonian does not include the term for damping.
So what Hamiltonian do you suggest for a damped oscillator?
> > I have recently thought what is the Lagrangian for a harmonic > > oscillator with damping. For instance, consider the equation of > > motion
> > (A) x'' = (-k/m)x - ax'
> > Actually, the problem arises for a simple Newtonian body moving with > > friction. If I'm right, many of the readers probabely know this, > > but the conclusion I arrived at is that there is no Lagrangian.
> How about:
> L = 1/2 (m(x')^2 - k x^2) + max't
Cool!
> > And that's why: > > assume otherwise, i.e., that the above models may be formulated > > using a Lagrangian, and therefore, eventually put into a > > Hamiltonian form.
> This one fails. The canonical conjugate of x is (mx' + mat)
> So the Hamiltonian:
> H = 1/2 ( m (x')^2 - k x^2 )
> The time dependent term has canceled.
That's because you are using the wrong variables! Lets express the Hamiltonian through the canonically conjugate x and p = mx' + mat:
(B) H = 1/2 ( (p - mat) / m^2 - k x^2 )
As you see, there is time dependance. When we use x and x', the sympletic structure carries the time dependance. The funny thing is, that we started with the time-translation invariant equation (A), and got the time-translation-asymmetric Hamiltonian (B). That's where the non-adiabatic nature reveals itself. This also explains where the Noether theorem fails.
> > This is interesting, how may we describe non-adiabatic models > > after all, and so, address the issue of quantum entropy.
Hmm, my plan failed. The entropy -k Tr(rho ln rho) doesn't rise.
mtx...@coventry.ac.uk wrote: > In article <395242FD.E9448...@xs4all.nl> some poor uncited person wrote: > >Yet another poor uncited guy wrote: > >> For instance, consider the equation of motion > >> (A) x'' = (-k/m)x - ax' > >How about:
> > L = 1/2 (m(x')^2 - k x^2) + max't > I get dL/dx' = mx' + mat, so d/dt(dL/dx') = mx'' + ma. > Then setting this equal to dL/dx=-kx just gives > mx'' + ma = -kx > or > x'' = -(k/m)x - a
> So what Hamiltonian do you suggest for a damped oscillator?
> Or even simpler, a first order system, like
> x' = ax
Why should there be one?
There is no Lagrangian, L=L(x,x'), such that the differential equation x' = ax is the Euler-Lagrange equation of L. Likewise, there is no corresponding Hamiltonian related by the Legendre dual transformation.
How do I know? If a system of DEs are Euler-Lagrange equations then their linearization defines a formally self-adjoint differential operator (this necessary condition is in fact locally sufficient). This test for the existence of a Lagrangian constitutes the "Helmholtz conditions". It is represents the tip of the iceberg in the study of the inverse problem in the calculus of variations.
Since your equation is already linear it is pretty easy to construct its linearization ;) . Since this linear operator is not formally self-adjoint there ain't no Lagrangian.
Some (many? most?) dynamical systems just don't admit variational principles. I guess that means that they cannot be considered "quantizable" and hence are somehow not "fundamental". What's perhaps a little more amusing in this regard are the systems that admit more than one Lagrangian since now one has in priniciple different quantum theories with the same classical limit and one has to decide which Lagrangian nature uses - and why.
> > So what Hamiltonian do you suggest for a damped oscillator?
> > Or even simpler, a first order system, like
> > x' = ax
> Why should there be one?
This was in reaction to the statement that adiabaticity is not required. There may be other requirements, though.
[..]
> Since your equation is already linear it is pretty easy > to construct its linearization ;) . Since this linear operator is not > formally self-adjoint there ain't no Lagrangian.
> Some (many? most?) dynamical systems just don't admit variational principles. > I guess that means that they cannot be considered "quantizable" and hence > are somehow not "fundamental". What's perhaps a little more amusing in > this regard are the systems that admit more than one Lagrangian since now > one has in priniciple different quantum theories with the same classical > limit and one has to decide which Lagrangian nature uses - and why.
Could you explain what you mean by "amusing", please, for us simple folk who don't follow the nuance. What's so funny and why?
-- Best regards, Ralph E. Frost Frost Low Energy Physics
"I go the way of all the earth. Be thou strong therefore, and show thyself a man." 1 Kings 2:2
> I have recently thought what is the Lagrangian for a harmonic oscillator > with damping. For instance, consider the equation of motion
> (A) x'' = (-k/m)x - ax'
> [T]he problem arises for a simple Newtonian body moving with friction. .... > The [ ... ] Lagrangian for an oscillator with damping is
> (C) L = 1/2 (mx'^2-kx^2) exp(at)
> It yields the conjugate momentum
> (D) p = mx'exp(at)
> and the equation of motion (A). The Hamiltonian is
> (E) H = 1/2 (mx'^2+kx^2) exp(at)
> to which the said before still applies. The exponent in (D) also solves > the problem with Liouvilles theorem.
This simple problem, amusingly, admits an explicitly time-dependent Lagrangian and a corresponding time-dependent Hamiltonian. The latter is the energy of the oscillator (as it is usually defined) at t=0. Naturally it is conserved.
If you try this procedure with a multidimensional oscillator that does not have the same exponential decay factors for all the modes you will typically not be able to find a time-dependent Lagrangian such as the one above that yields the equations of motion. Instead you will need a second function F known as Rayleigh's dissipation function which in combination with the usual Lagrangian L yields the correct equations of motion:
(d/dt)(d_L/d_x') - (d_L/d_x) + (d_F/d_x') = 0
(where x is one of the generalized coordinates, and d_ indicates a partial derivative). See Section 1.5 (pp. 23-24) of the second edition of Herbert Goldstein's _Classical Mechanics_.
The dissipation function approach is not useful for certain fundamental problems such as calculating entropy or deriving fluctuation-dissipation theorems. If that is your goal, I'd like to suggest the following exercise.
Take an electrical analogue of your damped oscillator, replacing the mass and spring by and inductor and capacitor. But do not use a resistor in in place of the viscous damping pot; instead, substitute a semi-infinite transmission line. This has the same terminal characteristics as a resistor, but is an explicitly conservative system. Now write the Lagrangian or Hamiltonian for the combined system. You will find, if you work out the details, that the resistor is only part of the equivalent circuit of the transmission line. The other part is a source (voltage source in series or current source in parallel). If you consider an initial value problem starting at t=0, then the resistor accounts for the energy which flows from the resonant circuit into the transmission line, while the source accounts for the energy initially stored in the transmission line that flows into the resonant circuit. If you consider what has to be stored in the transmission line prior to t=0 to give rise to specified initial conditions, you will find that the system is time-reversal invariant (a T reversal swaps the roles of the resistor and the source). Next put the system in thermal equilibrium and determine the power spectrum of that source. You will have re-derived a fluctuation-dissipation theorem first proved by H. Nyquist in 1928.
In article <4Q5ClMhU7...@cc.usu.edu>, Charles Torre <to...@cc.usu.edu> wrote: >In article <8j0e95$...@gap.cco.caltech.edu>, ke...@cco.caltech.edu (Kevin A. Scaldeferri) writes: >> In article <UFS$3V8YH...@cc.usu.edu>, Charles Torre <to...@cc.usu.edu> wrote:
>>>Nah. If there is a Lagrangian formulation then there is a >>>Hamiltonian formulation and vice versa.
>> I'm not sure this is true. I can write down a Lagrangian with an >> infinite number of time derivatives. It's rather unclear how to turn >> this into a Hamiltonian. (This is a particularly perverse case, but >> not completely without interest.)
>Well, ahem, hmmm. Okay. But you are stretching the definition of >"Lagrangian" a bit from its usual one ( I guess I thought >that the more or less standard classical mechanics kind of >Lagrangian was being discussed). As usual, most disagreements >are more about definitions than consequences of definitions. Normally >one defines a Lagrangian as a local function of the spacetime coordinates, >the dynamical variables and a finite number of their derivatives, which >is what I had in mind.
You are right, this is a non-local Lagrangian. To let the cat out of the bag, what I am thinking of is the sort of Lagrangian encountered in non-commutative field theories.
>I would be interested in hearing some more about >cases where it is useful to think in terms of Lagrangians with an >infinite number of derivatives. Oh. Maybe you are thinking about >effective actions in quantum theory? Fair enough. (Still, >even though an infinite number of derivatives may arise in a >derivative expansion of the "Lagrangian", one usually truncates >to a finite number of terms in any perturbative computation. >Then what I said still applies.)
These cases are different from an effective action. There is not a momentum expansion the way there usually is in an effective theory.
OTOH, as I said, this case is a little perverse as the theories with infinite numbers of time derivatives are not unitary. The theories with infinite space derivatives are okay, though.
-- ====================================================================== Kevin Scaldeferri Calif. Institute of Technology The INTJ's Prayer: Lord keep me open to others' ideas, WRONG though they may be.
squ...@my-deja.com wrote: > The true Lagrangian for an oscillator with damping is
> (C) L = 1/2 (mx'^2-kx^2) exp(at)
> It yields the conjugate momentum
> (D) p = mx'exp(at)
> and the equation of motion (A). The Hamiltonian is
> (E) H = 1/2 (mx'^2+kx^2) exp(at)
Unfortunatelly, the quantization of this system doesn't make any sense at all. The Shordinger equation generated my (E) may yield some kind of damping, but (D) leads to a modification of the Heisnberg uncertainty, which is altogether unreasonable: (delta x)(delta v) >= exp(-at)hbar/2m
Norbert Dragon <dra...@itp.uni-hannover.de writes: > * Charles Torre to...@cc.usu.edu writes:
>> What's perhaps a little more amusing in this regard are the systems >> that admit more than one Lagrangian since now one has in priniciple >> different quantum theories with the same classical limit and one has >> to decide which Lagrangian nature uses - and why.
> The correspondence of Euler-Lagrange equations and Lagrangean is > unique up to total derivatives.
Right. Well, there is one interesting exception. If 2 Lagrangians, say L_1 and L_2 have the same Euler-Lagrange equations then their difference,
L_0 = L_1 - L_2
must have identically vanishing Euler-Lagrange equations. L_0 is sometimes called a "null Lagrangian". Locally, null Lagrangians can be expressed as a total derivative (or total divergence in a field theory) just as you say, but this may not be true globally if the configuration space of the theory has some topology. I believe there is a theorem to the effect that, for a field theory on an n-dimensional manifold (n=1 means mechanics), to every representative of a degree n cohomology class on the bundle of independent and dependent variables (i.e., the bundle of fields) one can construct a Lagrangian that is not a total divergence, but nevertheless has identically vanishing Euler-Lagrange equations. To get an interesting example one probably needs some cohomology in "field space" (rather than just in spacetime). Probably I could cook up some examples if you are perverse enough to really be interested in this phenomenon. Anyway, this wasn't really what I was thinking of when I made the comment about different Lagrangians and quantization. As you say...
> However, it may turn out that different systems of equations have > the same set of solutions, which poses the problem to find the > functionals which become stationary exactly for a given set of > functions.
> An example of two different, local functionals with the same set of > stationary points is L_2 = a L_1 . Are there less trivial examples?
Excellent point. The more interesting possibility is that one could have two Lagrangians whose Euler-Lagrange (EL) equations are *equivalent* instead of identical. (I had inadvertently drifted into this point of view when I made the comment about inequivalent Lagrangians and quantum theory. Thanks for keeping me honest.) This point of view gives a much more useful (and much harder) form of the inverse problem in the calculus of variations: when is there a Lagrangian whose EL equations are *equivalent* (rather than identical) to a specified set of equations. I say that this point of view is more useful since one often times does not have equations expressed in just the right form to be EL equations, even though there is an underlying Lagrangian for the dynamical system of interest. For example, the vacuum Einstein equations G_ab=0 (G is the Einstein tensor) are not the EL equations of any Lagrangian. (Wait! Don't shoot until after you read the next two sentences.) But they are equivalent to a system of equations E_ab=0 which ARE EL equations. Here E is the Einstein tensor multiplied by the square root of the determinant of the metric.
The paper by Anderson and Thompson that I cited earlier in this thread gives, I think, a pretty near state of the art treatment of this more general type of inverse problem for ODEs. The PDE version of this inverse problem is, I think, in a much more primitive state. As I recall, in that paper you will find examples of DEs which admit more than one Lagrangian such that the various Lagrangians do not differ by a total derivative or constant rescaling. These examples do NOT arise because of the topological subtleties that I mentioned earlier, but rather because of the freedom to choose alternative, but equivalent, equations of motion. (Sorry. I don't have the paper available so I can't whip out one of their examples. )
Gerard Westendorp <west...@xs4all.nl> writes: > Charles Torre wrote:
>> Since your equation is already linear it is pretty easy >> to construct its linearization ;) . Since this linear operator is not >> formally self-adjoint there ain't no Lagrangian.
> What is formally self-adjoint?
This is differential equation terminology. I guess the quickest way to define it here would be to introduce a scalar product (f,g), which is the just the integral (over, say, t) of the product of f=f(t) and g=g(t) (over some region). The linearization of a differential equation defines a linear differential operator, call it L. Let's denote by Lf the action of this operator on f. The formal adjoint of L, denoted by L*, is computed using integration by parts in the defining relation
(f,Lg) = (L*f,g).
Just integrate by parts ignoring boundary terms to find out what L* is. (See below for an alternative definition). Exercise: show that if
Lf = f' - af
then
L*f = - f' - af.
You can think of formal self-adjointness of the linearized equations as being just the statement that the second functional derivative of the action integral is symmetric under interchange of derivatives. So, this is a functional analogue of the usual sort of integrability condition (dG=0) for an equation of the form dF = G. In this analogy G represents the equations of motion, F is the Lagrangian and d is the process of forming the Euler-Lagrange equations (the "functional derivative").
*********************
Alternative definition: Given a linear differential operator L, there exists a unique linear differential operator L* such that, for any functions f and g
g Lf - f L*g = h',
for some h. All this can be generalized to more complicated types of differential operators.
In article <8j39ms$...@gap.cco.caltech.edu>, ke...@cco.caltech.edu (Kevin A. Scaldeferri) wrote:
> ... > You are right, this is a non-local Lagrangian. To let the cat out of > the bag, what I am thinking of is the sort of Lagrangian encountered > in non-commutative field theories.
Are you referring to non-commutative geometry? How do this Lagrangians arise there?