17,606 research outputs found
Resonances, Radiation Damping and Instability in Hamiltonian Nonlinear Wave Equations
We consider a class of nonlinear Klein-Gordon equations which are Hamiltonian
and are perturbations of linear dispersive equations. The unperturbed dynamical
system has a bound state, a spatially localized and time periodic solution. We
show that, for generic nonlinear Hamiltonian perturbations, all small amplitude
solutions decay to zero as time tends to infinity at an anomalously slow rate.
In particular, spatially localized and time-periodic solutions of the linear
problem are destroyed by generic nonlinear Hamiltonian perturbations via slow
radiation of energy to infinity. These solutions can therefore be thought of as
metastable states.
The main mechanism is a nonlinear resonant interaction of bound states
(eigenfunctions) and radiation (continuous spectral modes), leading to energy
transfer from the discrete to continuum modes.
This is in contrast to the KAM theory in which appropriate nonresonance
conditions imply the persistence of invariant tori. A hypothesis ensuring that
such a resonance takes place is a nonlinear analogue of the Fermi golden rule,
arising in the theory of resonances in quantum mechanics. The techniques used
involve: (i) a time-dependent method developed by the authors for the treatment
of the quantum resonance problem and perturbations of embedded eigenvalues,
(ii) a generalization of the Hamiltonian normal form appropriate for infinite
dimensional dispersive systems and (iii) ideas from scattering theory. The
arguments are quite general and we expect them to apply to a large class of
systems which can be viewed as the interaction of finite dimensional and
infinite dimensional dispersive dynamical systems, or as a system of particles
coupled to a field.Comment: To appear in Inventiones Mathematica
Time Dependent Resonance Theory
An important class of resonance problems involves the study of perturbations
of systems having embedded eigenvalues in their continuous spectrum. Problems
with this mathematical structure arise in the study of many physical systems,
e.g. the coupling of an atom or molecule to a photon-radiation field, and Auger
states of the helium atom, as well as in spectral geometry and number theory.
We present a dynamic (time-dependent) theory of such quantum resonances. The
key hypotheses are (i) a resonance condition which holds generically
(non-vanishing of the {\it Fermi golden rule}) and (ii) local decay estimates
for the unperturbed dynamics with initial data consisting of continuum modes
associated with an interval containing the embedded eigenvalue of the
unperturbed Hamiltonian. No assumption of dilation analyticity of the potential
is made. Our method explicitly demonstrates the flow of energy from the
resonant discrete mode to continuum modes due to their coupling. The approach
is also applicable to nonautonomous linear problems and to nonlinear problems.
We derive the time behavior of the resonant states for intermediate and long
times. Examples and applications are presented. Among them is a proof of the
instability of an embedded eigenvalue at a threshold energy under suitable
hypotheses.Comment: to appear in Geometrical and Functional Analysi
Nonautonomous Hamiltonians
We present a theory of resonances for a class of non-autonomous Hamiltonians
to treat the structural instability of spatially localized and time-periodic
solutions associated with an unperturbed autonomous Hamiltonian.
The mechanism of instability is radiative decay, due to resonant coupling of
the discrete modes to the continuum modes by the time-dependent perturbation.
This results in a slow transfer of energy from the discrete modes to the
continuum. The rate of decay of solutions is slow and hence the decaying bound
states can be viewed as metastable. The ideas are closely related to the
authors' work on (i) a time dependent approach to the instability of
eigenvalues embedded in the continuous spectra, and (ii) resonances, radiation
damping and instability in Hamiltonian nonlinear wave equations. The theory is
applied to a general class of Schr\"odinger equations. The phenomenon of
ionization may be viewed as a resonance problem of the type we consider and we
apply our theory to find the rate of ionization, spectral line shift and local
decay estimates for such Hamiltonians.Comment: To appear in Journal of Statistical Physic
Symplectic Microgeometry II: Generating functions
We adapt the notion of generating functions for lagrangian submanifolds to
symplectic microgeometry. We show that a symplectic micromorphism always admits
a global generating function. As an application, we describe hamiltonian flows
as special symplectic micromorphisms whose local generating functions are the
solutions of Hamilton-Jacobi equations. We obtain a purely categorical
formulation of the temporal evolution in classical mechanics.Comment: 27 pages, 1 figur
Defect Modes and Homogenization of Periodic Schr\"odinger Operators
We consider the discrete eigenvalues of the operator
H_\eps=-\Delta+V(\x)+\eps^2Q(\eps\x), where V(\x) is periodic and Q(\y)
is localized on . For \eps>0 and sufficiently small, discrete
eigenvalues may bifurcate (emerge) from spectral band edges of the periodic
Schr\"odinger operator, H_0 = -\Delta_\x+V(\x), into spectral gaps. The
nature of the bifurcation depends on the homogenized Schr\"odinger operator
L_{A,Q}=-\nabla_\y\cdot A \nabla_\y +\ Q(\y). Here, denotes the inverse
effective mass matrix, associated with the spectral band edge, which is the
site of the bifurcation.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figures, to appear SIAM J. Math. Ana
Coisotropic submanifolds in Poisson geometry and branes in the Poisson sigma model
General boundary conditions ("branes") for the Poisson sigma model are
studied. They turn out to be labeled by coisotropic submanifolds of the given
Poisson manifold. The role played by these boundary conditions both at the
classical and at the perturbative quantum level is discussed. It turns out to
be related at the classical level to the category of Poisson manifolds with
dual pairs as morphisms and at the perturbative quantum level to the category
of associative algebras (deforming algebras of functions on Poisson manifolds)
with bimodules as morphisms. Possibly singular Poisson manifolds arising from
reduction enter naturally into the picture and, in particular, the construction
yields (under certain assumptions) their deformation quantization.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures; minor corrections, references updated; final
versio
A Counterexample to the Quantizability of Modules
Let a Poisson structure on a manifold M be given. If it vanishes at a point
m, the evaluation at m defines a one dimensional representation of the Poisson
algebra of functions on M. We show that this representation can, in general,
not be quantized. Precisely, we give a counterexample for M=R^n, such that:
(i) The evaluation map at 0 can not be quantized to a representation of the
algebra of functions with product the Kontsevich product associated to the
Poisson structure.
(ii) For any formal Poisson structure extending the given one and vanishing
at zero up to second order in epsilon, (i) still holds.
We do not know whether the second claim remains true if one allows the higher
order terms in epsilon to attain nonzero values at zero
Integration of twisted Dirac brackets
The correspondence between Poisson structures and symplectic groupoids,
analogous to the one of Lie algebras and Lie groups, plays an important role in
Poisson geometry; it offers, in particular, a unifying framework for the study
of hamiltonian and Poisson actions. In this paper, we extend this
correspondence to the context of Dirac structures twisted by a closed 3-form.
More generally, given a Lie groupoid over a manifold , we show that
multiplicative 2-forms on relatively closed with respect to a closed 3-form
on correspond to maps from the Lie algebroid of into the
cotangent bundle of , satisfying an algebraic condition and a
differential condition with respect to the -twisted Courant bracket. This
correspondence describes, as a special case, the global objects associated to
twisted Dirac structures. As applications, we relate our results to equivariant
cohomology and foliation theory, and we give a new description of
quasi-hamiltonian spaces and group-valued momentum maps.Comment: 42 pages. Minor changes, typos corrected. Revised version to appear
in Duke Math.
Excitation Thresholds for Nonlinear Localized Modes on Lattices
Breathers are spatially localized and time periodic solutions of extended
Hamiltonian dynamical systems. In this paper we study excitation thresholds for
(nonlinearly dynamically stable) ground state breather or standing wave
solutions for networks of coupled nonlinear oscillators and wave equations of
nonlinear Schr\"odinger (NLS) type. Excitation thresholds are rigorously
characterized by variational methods. The excitation threshold is related to
the optimal (best) constant in a class of discr ete interpolation inequalities
related to the Hamiltonian energy. We establish a precise connection among ,
the dimensionality of the lattice, , the degree of the nonlinearity
and the existence of an excitation threshold for discrete nonlinear
Schr\"odinger systems (DNLS).
We prove that if , then ground state standing waves exist if
and only if the total power is larger than some strictly positive threshold,
. This proves a conjecture of Flach, Kaldko& MacKay in
the context of DNLS. We also discuss upper and lower bounds for excitation
thresholds for ground states of coupled systems of NLS equations, which arise
in the modeling of pulse propagation in coupled arrays of optical fibers.Comment: To appear in Nonlinearit
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