Classical Mechanics/Central Field: Difference between revisions

From testwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>AromaticPolygon
Changed the math display style to block, changed laws of motion to equations of motion, added descriptions for intermediate steps of calculating equation of motion of r from Euler-Lagrange equations
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 15:15, 10 July 2023

< Classical Mechanics

Prev Up Next

Consider a central potential V(r). A central potential is where the potential is dependent only on the field point's distance from the origin; in other words, the potential is isotropic.

The Lagrangian of the system can be written as

=12mx˙2V(r)

Since the potential is spherically symmetry, it makes sense to write the Lagrangian in spherical coordinates.

x˙2=(ddt(rsinϕsinθ,rcosϕsinθ,rcosθ))2

It can then be worked out that:

x˙2=r˙2+r2θ˙2+r2ϕ˙2sin2θ

Hence the equation for the Lagrangian is:

=12m(r˙2+r2θ˙2+r2ϕ˙2sin2θ)V(r)

One can then extract three laws of motion from the Lagrangian using the Euler-Lagrange formula:

ddt(r˙)=r Substituting in : ddt(mr˙)=(mrθ˙2+mrϕ˙2sin2θVr) Calculating the derivatives: md2rdt2=mrθ˙2+mrϕ˙2sin2θVr

This looks messy, but when we look at the Euler-Lagrange relation for ϕ, we have

ddt(mr2ϕ˙sin2θ)=0

Hence mr2ϕ˙sin2θ is a constant throughout the motion.

Template:BookCat