Action (physics)
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In physics, the action is an integral quantity that is used to determine the evolution of a physical system between two defined states using the calculus of variations. Several different definitions of the action are in common use in physics, as described below. The action is usually an integral over time, but may be integrated over spatial variables as well (for action pertaining to fields); in still other cases, the action is integrated along the path followed by the physical system.
The evolution of a physical system between two states is determined by requiring the action be minimized or, more generally, be stationary for small perturbations about the true evolution. This requirement leads to differential equations that describe the true evolution. Conversely, an action principle is a method for reformulating differential equations of motion for a physical system as an equivalent integral equation. Although several variants have been defined (see below), the most commonly used action principle is Hamilton's principle. An earlier, less informative action principle is Maupertuis' principle, which is sometimes called by its (less correct) historical name, the principle of least action.
The differential equations of motion for any physical system can be re-formulated as an equivalent integral equation. Hence, Hamilton's principle applies not only to the classical mechanics of a single particle, but also to classical fields such as the electromagnetic and gravitational fields. Hamilton's principle has also been extended to quantum mechanics and quantum field theory.
[edit] Disambiguation of "action" in classical physics
In classical physics, the term action has at least eight distinct meanings.
[edit] Action (functional)
Most commonly, the term is used for a functional which takes a function of time and (for fields) space as input and returns a scalar. Specifically, in classical mechanics, the input function is the evolution of the system between two time points t1 and t2, where represent the generalized coordinates. The action is defined as the integral of the Lagrangian L for an input evolution between the two time points
where the endpoints of the evolution are fixed and defined as and . According to Hamilton's principle, the true evolution is an evolution for which the action is stationary (a minimum, maximum, or a saddle point). This principle results in the equations of motion in Lagrangian mechanics.
[edit] Abbreviated action (functional)
Usually denoted as ), this is also a functional. Here the input function is the path followed by the physical system without regard to its parameterization by time. For example, the path of a planetary orbit is an ellipse, and the path of a particle in a uniform gravitational field is a parabola; in both cases, the path does not depend on how fast the particle traverses the path. The abbreviated action is defined as the integral of the generalized momenta along a path in the generalized coordinates
According to Maupertuis' principle, the true path is a path for which the abbreviated action is stationary.
[edit] Hamilton's principal function
Hamilton's principal function is defined by the Hamilton-Jacobi equations (HJE), another alternative formulation of classical mechanics. This function S is related to the functional by fixing the initial time t1 and endpoint and allowing the upper limits t2 and the second endpoint to vary; these variables are the arguments of the function S. In other words, the action function S is the indefinite integral of the Lagrangian with respect to time.
[edit] Hamilton's characteristic function
When total energy E is conserved, the HJE can be solved with the time-independent function , which is called Hamilton's characteristic function. (See Hamilton-Jacobi equations: Separation of variables.)
[edit] Other solutions of Hamilton-Jacobi equations
The Hamilton-Jacobi equations are often solved by additive separability; in some cases, the individual terms of the solution, e.g., Sk(qk), are also called an "action".
[edit] Action of a generalized coordinate
This is a single variable Jk in the action-angle coordinates, defined by integrating a single generalized momentum around a closed path in phase space, corresponding to rotating or oscillating motion
The variable Jk is called the "action" of the generalized coordinate qk; the corresponding canonical variable conjugate to Jk is its "angle" wk, for reasons described more fully under action-angle coordinates. NB! The integration is only over a single variable qk and, therefore, unlike the integrated dot product in the abbreviated action integral above. The Jk variable equals the change in Sk(qk) as qk is varied around the closed path. For several physical systems of interest, Jk is either a constant or varies very slowly; hence, the variable Jk is often used in perturbation calculations and in determining adiabatic invariants.
[edit] Action for a Hamiltonian flow
[edit] Historical uses
The term "action" was defined in several obsolete ways during its development. Gottfried Leibniz, Johann Bernoulli and Pierre Louis Maupertuis defined the "action" for light as the integral of its speed (or inverse speed) along its path length. Leonhard Euler (and, possibly, Leibniz) defined it for a material particle as the integral of the particle speed along its path through space. Maupertuis introduced several ad hoc and contradictory definitions of "action" within a single article, defining action as potential energy, as virtual kinetic energy, and as a strange hybrid that ensured conservation of momentum in collisions.
[edit] Euler-Lagrange equations for the action integral
As noted above, the requirement that the action integral be stationary under small perturbations of the evolution is equivalent to a set of differential equations (called the Euler-Lagrange equations) that may be determined using the calculus of variations. We illustrate this derivation here using only one coordinate, x; the extension to multiple coordinates is straightforward.
Adopting Hamilton's principle, we assume that the Lagrangian L (the integrand of the action integral) depends only on the coordinate x(t) and its time derivative dx(t)/dt, and does not depend on time explicitly. In that case, the action integral can be written
where the initial and final times (t1 and t2) and the final and initial positions are specified in advance as x1 = x(t1) and x2 = x(t2). Let xtrue(t) represent the true evolution that we seek, and let xper(t) be a slightly perturbed version of it, albeit with the same endpoints, xper(t1) = x1 and xper(t2) = x2. The difference between these two evolutions, which we will call , is infinitesimally small at all times
At the endpoints, the difference vanishes, i.e., .
Expanded to first order, the difference between the actions integrals for the two evolutions is
Integration by parts of the last term, together with the boundary conditions , yields the equation
The requirement that be stationary implies that the first-order change must be zero for any possible perturbation about the true evolution. This can be true only if
- Euler-Lagrange equation
Those familiar with functional analysis will note that the Euler-Lagrange equations simplify to
- .
The quantity is called the conjugate momentum for the coordinate x. An important consequence of the Euler-Lagrange eqations is that if L does not explicitly contain coordinate x, i.e.
- if , then is constant.
In such cases, the coordinate x is called a cyclic coordinate, and its conjugate momentum is conserved.
[edit] Example: Free particle in polar coordinates
Simple examples help to appreciate the use of the action principle via the Euler-Lagrangian equations. A free particle (mass m and velocity v) in Euclidean space moves in a straight line. Using the Euler-Lagrange equations, this can be shown in polar coordinates as follows. In the absence of a potential, the Lagrangian is simply equal to the kinetic energy
in orthonormal (x,y) coordinates, where the dot represents differentiation with respect to the curve parameter (usually the time, t). In polar coordinates (r, φ) the kinetic energy and hence the Lagrangian becomes
The radial r and φ components of the Euler-Lagrangian equations become, respectively
The solution of these two equations is given by
for a set of constants a, b, c, d determined by initial conditions. Thus, indeed, the solution is a straight line given in polar coordinates.
[edit] Action principle for classical fields
The action principle can be extended to obtain the equations of motion for fields, such as the electromagnetic field or gravity.
The Einstein equation utilizes the Einstein-Hilbert action as constrained by a variational principle.
The path of a body in a gravitational field (i.e. free fall in space time, a so called geodesic) can be found using the action principle.
[edit] Action principle in quantum mechanics and quantum field theory
In quantum mechanics, the system does not follow a single path whose action is stationary, but the behavior of the system depends on all imaginable paths and the value of their action. The action corresponding to the various paths is used to calculate the path integral, that gives the probability amplitudes of the various outcomes.
Although equivalent in classical mechanics with Newton's laws, the action principle is better suited for generalizations and plays an important role in modern physics. Indeed, this principle is one of the great generalizations in physical science. In particular, it is fully appreciated and best understood within quantum mechanics. Richard Feynman's path integral formulation of quantum mechanics is based on a stationary-action principle, using path integrals. Maxwell's equations can be derived as conditions of stationary action.
[edit] Action principle and conservation laws
Symmetries in a physical situation can better be treated with the action principle, together with the Euler-Lagrange equations, which are derived from the action principle. An example is Noether's theorem, which states that to every continuous symmetry in a physical situation there corresponds a conservation law (and conversely). This deep connection requires that the action principle be assumed.
[edit] Modern extensions of the action principle
The action principle can be generalized still further. For example, the action need not be an integral because nonlocal actions are possible. The configuration space need not even be a functional space given certain features such as noncommutative geometry. However, a physical basis for these mathematical extensions remains to be established experimentally.
[edit] See also
- Lagrangian
- Lagrangian mechanics
- Noether's theorem
- Hamiltonian mechanics
- Calculus of variations
- Functional derivative
- Functional integral
- Path integral formulation
- Quantum physics
- Entropy (the least Action Principle and the Principle of Maximum Probability or Entropy could be seen analogous)
[edit] References
For an annotated bibliography, see Edwin F. Taylor [1] who lists, among other things, the following books
- Cornelius Lanczos, The Variational Principles of Mechanics (Dover Publications, New York, 1986). ISBN 0-486-65067-7. The reference most quoted by all those who explore this field.
- L. D. Landau and E. M. Lifshitz, Mechanics, Course of Theoretical Physics (Butterworth-Heinenann, 1976), 3rd ed., Vol. 1. ISBN 0-7506-2896-0. Begins with the principle of least action.
- Thomas A. Moore "Least-Action Principle" in Macmillan Encyclopedia of Physics (Simon & Schuster Macmillan, 1996), Volume 2, ISBN 0-02-897359-3, OCLC 35269891, pages 840 – 842.
- David Morin introduces Lagrange's equations in Chapter 5 of his honors introductory physics text. Concludes with a wonderful set of 27 problems with solutions. A draft of is available at [2]
- Gerald Jay Sussman and Jack Wisdom, Structure and Interpretation of Classical Mechanics (MIT Press, 2001). Begins with the principle of least action, uses modern mathematical notation, and checks the clarity and consistency of procedures by programming them in computer language.
- Dare A. Wells, Lagrangian Dynamics, Schaum's Outline Series (McGraw-Hill, 1967) ISBN 0-07-069258-0, A 350 page comprehensive "outline" of the subject.
- Robert Weinstock, Calculus of Variations, with Applications to Physics and Engineering (Dover Publications, 1974). ISBN 0-486-63069-2. An oldie but goodie, with the formalism carefully defined before use in physics and engineering.
- Wolfgang Yourgrau and Stanley Mandelstam, Variational Principles in Dynamics and Quantum Theory (Dover Publications, 1979). A nice treatment that does not avoid the philosophical implications of the theory and lauds the Feynman treatment of quantum mechanics that reduces to the principle of least action in the limit of large mass.
- Edwin F. Taylor's page [3]
- Principle of least action interactive Excellent interactive explanation/webpage