- Poisson bracket
In
mathematics andclassical mechanics , the Poisson bracket is an important operator inHamiltonian mechanics , playing a central role in the definition of the time-evolution of adynamical system in the Hamiltonian formulation. In a more general setting, the Poisson bracket is used to define aPoisson algebra , of which thePoisson manifold s are a special case. These are all named in honour ofSiméon-Denis Poisson .Canonical coordinates
In
canonical coordinates on thephase space , given two functions and , the Poisson bracket takes the form:
Equations of motion
The
Hamilton-Jacobi equations of motion have an equivalent expression in terms of the Poisson bracket. This may be most directly demonstrated in an explicit coordinate frame. Suppose that is a function on the manifold. Then one has:
Then, by taking and to be solutions to the Hamilton-Jacobi equations and , one may write
:
Thus, the time evolution of a function "f" on a symplectic manifold can be given as a one-parameter family of
symplectomorphism s, with the time "t" being the parameter. Dropping the coordinates, one has:
The operator is known as the
Liouvillian .Constants of motion
An
integrable dynamical system will haveconstants of motion in addition to the energy. Such constants of motion will commute with theHamiltonian under the Poisson bracket. Suppose some function is a constant of motion. This implies that if is atrajectory or solution to theHamilton-Jacobi equations of motion , then one has that along that trajectory. Then one has:
where, as above, the intermediate step follows by applying the equations of motion. This equation is known as the
Liouville equation . The content ofLiouville's theorem is that the time evolution of a measure (or "distribution function " on the phase space) is given by the above.In order for a Hamiltonian system to be
completely integrable , all of the constants of motion must be in mutual involution.Definition
Let "M" be
symplectic manifold , that is, amanifold on which there exists asymplectic form : a 2-form which is both closed () and non-degenerate, in the following sense: when viewed as a map , is invertible to obtain . Here is theexterior derivative operation intrinsic to the manifold structure of "M", and is theinterior product or contraction operation, which is equivalent to on 1-forms .Using the axioms of the
exterior calculus , one can derive::
Here denotes the Lie bracket on smooth vector fields, whose properties essentially define the manifold structure of "M".
If "v" is such that , we may call it -coclosed (or just coclosed). Similarly, if for some function "f", we may call "v" -coexact (or just coexact). Given that , the expression above implies that the Lie bracket of two coclosed vector fields is always a coexact vector field, because when "v" and "w" are both coclosed, the only nonzero term in the expression is . And because the exterior derivative obeys , all coexact vector fields are coclosed; so the Lie bracket is closed both on the space of coclosed vector fields and on the subspace within it consisting of the coexact vector fields. In the language of
abstract algebra , the coclosed vector fields form asubalgebra of theLie algebra of smooth vector fields on "M", and the coexact vector fields form analgebraic ideal of this subalgebra.Given the existence of the inverse map , every smooth real-valued function "f" on "M" may be associated with a coexact vector field . (Two functions are associated with the same vector field if and only if their difference is in the kernel of "d", i. e., constant on each connected component of "M".) We therefore define the Poisson bracket on , a
bilinear operation ondifferentiable functions, under which the (smooth) functions form analgebra . It is given by::
The skew-symmetry of the Poisson bracket is ensured by the axioms of the
exterior calculus and the condition . Because the map is pointwise linear and skew-symmetric in this sense, some authors associate it with a bivector, which is not an object often encountered in the exterior calculus. In this form it is called thePoisson bivector or thePoisson structure on the symplectic manifold, and the Poisson bracket written simply .The Poisson bracket on smooth functions corresponds to the Lie bracket on coexact vector fields and inherits its properties. It therefore satisfies the
Jacobi identity ::
The Poisson bracket with respect to a particular scalar field "f" corresponds to the
Lie derivative with respect to . Consequently, it is a derivation; that is, it satisfiesLeibniz' law ::
It is a fundamental property of manifolds that the
commutator of the Lie derivative operations with respect to two vector fields is equivalent to the Lie derivative with respect to some vector field, namely, their Lie bracket. The parallel role of the Poisson bracket is apparent from a rearrangement of the Jacobi identity::
If the Poisson bracket of "f" and "g" vanishes (), then "f" and "g" are said to be in mutual involution, and the operations of taking the Poisson bracket with respect to "f" and with respect to "g" commute.
Lie algebra
The Poisson brackets are
anticommutative . Note also that they satisfy theJacobi identity . This makes the space ofsmooth function s on asymplectic manifold an infinite-dimensionalLie algebra with the Poisson bracket acting as the Lie bracket. The correspondingLie group is the group ofsymplectomorphisms of the symplectic manifold (also known ascanonical transformation s).Given a differentiable
vector field "X" on thetangent bundle , let be itsconjugate momentum . The conjugate momentum mapping is aLie algebra anti-homomorphism from the Poisson bracket to theLie bracket ::
This important result is worth a short proof. Write a vector field "X" at point "q" in the
configuration space as:
where the is the local coordinate frame. The conjugate momentum to "X" has the expression
:
where the are the momentum functions conjugate to the coordinates. One then has, for a point in the
phase space ,::::::: :::
The above holds for all , giving the desired result.
ee also
*
Lagrange bracket
*Moyal bracket
*Peierls bracket
*Poisson superalgebra
*Poisson superbracket
*Dirac bracket References
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