454 research outputs found
Singularities and nonhyperbolic manifolds do not coincide
We consider the billiard flow of elastically colliding hard balls on the flat
-torus (), and prove that no singularity manifold can even
locally coincide with a manifold describing future non-hyperbolicity of the
trajectories. As a corollary, we obtain the ergodicity (actually the Bernoulli
mixing property) of all such systems, i.e. the verification of the
Boltzmann-Sinai Ergodic Hypothesis.Comment: Final version, to appear in Nonlinearit
An Elementary Proof of the Existence and Uniqueness Theorem for the Navier-Stokes Equations
We give a geometric approach to proving know regularity and existence
theorems for the 2D Navier-Stokes Equations. We feel this point of view is
instructive in better understanding the dynamics. The technique is inspired by
constructions in the Dynamical Systems.Comment: 15 Page
Non-ergodicity of the motion in three dimensional steep repelling dispersing potentials
It is demonstrated numerically that smooth three degrees of freedom
Hamiltonian systems which are arbitrarily close to three dimensional strictly
dispersing billiards (Sinai billiards) have islands of effective stability, and
hence are non-ergodic. The mechanism for creating the islands are corners of
the billiard domain.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Chao
One-particle and few-particle billiards
We study the dynamics of one-particle and few-particle billiard systems in containers of various shapes. In few-particle systems, the particles collide elastically both against the boundary and against each other. In the one-particle case, we investigate the formation and destruction of resonance islands in (generalized) mushroom billiards, which are a recently discovered class of Hamiltonian systems with mixed regular-chaotic dynamics. In the few-particle case, we compare the dynamics in container geometries whose counterpart one-particle billiards are integrable, chaotic, and mixed. One of our findings is that two-, three-, and four-particle billiards confined to containers with integrable one-particle counterparts inherit some integrals of motion and exhibit a regular partition of phase space into ergodic components of positive measure. Therefore, the shape of a container matters not only for noninteracting particles but also for interacting particles
Proving The Ergodic Hypothesis for Billiards With Disjoint Cylindric Scatterers
In this paper we study the ergodic properties of mathematical billiards
describing the uniform motion of a point in a flat torus from which finitely
many, pairwise disjoint, tubular neighborhoods of translated subtori (the so
called cylindric scatterers) have been removed. We prove that every such system
is ergodic (actually, a Bernoulli flow), unless a simple geometric obstacle for
the ergodicity is present.Comment: 24 pages, AMS-TeX fil
Evolution of collision numbers for a chaotic gas dynamics
We put forward a conjecture of recurrence for a gas of hard spheres that
collide elastically in a finite volume. The dynamics consists of a sequence of
instantaneous binary collisions. We study how the numbers of collisions of
different pairs of particles grow as functions of time. We observe that these
numbers can be represented as a time-integral of a function on the phase space.
Assuming the results of the ergodic theory apply, we describe the evolution of
the numbers by an effective Langevin dynamics. We use the facts that hold for
these dynamics with probability one, in order to establish properties of a
single trajectory of the system. We find that for any triplet of particles
there will be an infinite sequence of moments of time, when the numbers of
collisions of all three different pairs of the triplet will be equal. Moreover,
any value of difference of collision numbers of pairs in the triplet will
repeat indefinitely. On the other hand, for larger number of pairs there is but
a finite number of repetitions. Thus the ergodic theory produces a limitation
on the dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, published versio
Invariant measures for Burgers equation with stochastic forcing
In this paper we study the following Burgers equation
du/dt + d/dx (u^2/2) = epsilon d^2u/dx^2 + f(x,t)
where f(x,t)=dF/dx(x,t) is a random forcing function, which is periodic in x
and white noise in t. We prove the existence and uniqueness of an invariant
measure by establishing a ``one force, one solution'' principle, namely that
for almost every realization of the force, there is a unique distinguished
solution that exists for the time interval (-infty, +infty) and this solution
attracts all other solutions with the same forcing. This is done by studying
the so-called one-sided minimizers. We also give a detailed description of the
structure and regularity properties for the stationary solutions. In
particular, we prove, under some non-degeneracy conditions on the forcing, that
almost surely there is a unique main shock and a unique global minimizer for
the stationary solutions. Furthermore the global minimizer is a hyperbolic
trajectory of the underlying system of characteristics.Comment: 84 pages, published version, abstract added in migratio
The entropy of ``strange'' billiards inside n-simplexes
In the present work we investigate a new type of billiards defined inside of
--simplex regions. We determine an invariant ergodic (SRB) measure of the
dynamics for any dimension. In using symbolic dynamics, the (KS or metric)
entropy is computed and we find that the system is chaotic for all cases .Comment: 8 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript fil
- …