91 research outputs found
A new proof of the higher-order superintegrability of a noncentral oscillator with inversely quadratic nonlinearities
The superintegrability of a rational harmonic oscillator (non-central
harmonic oscillator with rational ratio of frequencies) with non-linear
"centrifugal" terms is studied. In the first part, the system is directly
studied in the Euclidean plane; the existence of higher-order
superintegrability (integrals of motion of higher order than 2 in the momenta)
is proved by introducing a deformation in the quadratic complex equation of the
linear system. The constants of motion of the nonlinear system are explicitly
obtained. In the second part, the inverse problem is analyzed in the general
case of degrees of freedom; starting with a general Hamiltonian , and
introducing appropriate conditions for obtaining superintegrability, the
particular "centrifugal" nonlinearities are obtained.Comment: 16 page
On the harmonic oscillator on the Lobachevsky plane
We introduce the harmonic oscillator on the Lobachevsky plane with the aid of
the potential where is the curvature
radius and is the geodesic distance from a fixed center. Thus the potential
is rotationally symmetric and unbounded likewise as in the Euclidean case. The
eigenvalue equation leads to the differential equation of spheroidal functions.
We provide a basic numerical analysis of eigenvalues and eigenfunctions in the
case when the value of the angular momentum, , equals 0.Comment: to appear in Russian Journal of Mathematical Physics (memorial volume
in honor of Vladimir Geyler
Linked and knotted beams of light, conservation of helicity and the flow of null electromagnetic fields
Maxwell's equations allow for some remarkable solutions consisting of pulsed
beams of light which have linked and knotted field lines. The preservation of
the topological structure of the field lines in these solutions has previously
been ascribed to the fact that the electric and magnetic helicity, a measure of
the degree of linking and knotting between field lines, are conserved. Here we
show that the elegant evolution of the field is due to the stricter condition
that the electric and magnetic fields be everywhere orthogonal. The field lines
then satisfy a `frozen field' condition and evolve as if they were unbreakable
filaments embedded in a fluid. The preservation of the orthogonality of the
electric and magnetic field lines is guaranteed for null, shear-free fields
such as the ones considered here by a theorem of Robinson. We calculate the
flow field of a particular solution and find it to have the form of a Hopf
fibration moving at the speed of light in a direction opposite to the
propagation of the pulsed light beam, a familiar structure in this type of
solution. The difference between smooth evolution of individual field lines and
conservation of electric and magnetic helicity is illustrated by considering a
further example in which the helicities are conserved, but the field lines are
not everywhere orthogonal. The field line configuration at time t=0 corresponds
to a nested family of torus knots but unravels upon evolution
Unusual formations of the free electromagnetic field in vacuum
It is shown that there are exact solutions of the free Maxwell equations
(FME) in vacuum allowing an existence of stable spherical formations of the
free magnetic field and ring-like formations of the free electric field. It is
detected that a form of these spheres and rings does not change with time in
vacuum. It is shown that these convergent solutions are the result of an
interference of some divergent solutions of FME. One can surmise that these
electromagnetic formations correspond to Kapitsa's hypothesis about
interference origin and a structure of fireball.Comment: Revtex-file, without figures. To get lournal-pdf-copy with figures
contact with [email protected]
The dynamical nature of time
It is usually assumed that the "" parameter in the equations of dynamics
can be identified with the indication of the pointer of a clock. Things are not
so easy, however. In fact, since the equations of motion can be written in
terms of but also of , being any well behaved function, each
one of those infinite parametric times is as good as the Newtonian one to
study classical dynamics. Here we show that the relation between the
mathematical parametric time in the equations of dynamics and the physical
dynamical time that is measured with clocks is more complex and subtle
than usually assumed. These two times, therefore, must be carefully
distinguished since their difference may have significant consequences.
Furthermore, we show that not all the dynamical clock-times are necessarily
equivalent and that the observational fingerprint of this non-equivalence has
the same form as that of the Pioneer anomaly.Comment: 13 pages, no figure
Hamiltonians separable in cartesian coordinates and third-order integrals of motion
We present in this article all Hamiltonian systems in E(2) that are separable
in cartesian coordinates and that admit a third-order integral, both in quantum
and in classical mechanics. Many of these superintegrable systems are new, and
it is seen that there exists a relation between quantum superintegrable
potentials, invariant solutions of the Korteweg-De Vries equation and the
Painlev\'e transcendents.Comment: 19 pages, Will be published in J. Math. Phy
A non-linear Oscillator with quasi-Harmonic behaviour: two- and -dimensional Oscillators
A nonlinear two-dimensional system is studied by making use of both the
Lagrangian and the Hamiltonian formalisms. The present model is obtained as a
two-dimensional version of a one-dimensional oscillator previously studied at
the classical and also at the quantum level. First, it is proved that it is a
super-integrable system, and then the nonlinear equations are solved and the
solutions are explicitly obtained. All the bounded motions are quasiperiodic
oscillations and the unbounded (scattering) motions are represented by
hyperbolic functions. In the second part the system is generalized to the case
of degrees of freedom. Finally, the relation of this nonlinear system with
the harmonic oscillator on spaces of constant curvature, two-dimensional sphere
and hyperbolic plane , is discussed.Comment: 30 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Nonlinearit
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