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Geometric perturbation theory in physics. (English) Zbl 0830.58036

Singapore: World Scientific. xxv, 560 p. (1986).
The author’s preface: “Modern differential geometric techniques are used to unify the physical asymptotics underlying mechanics, wave theory and statistical mechanics. The approach gives new insights into the structure of physical theories and is suited to the needs of modern large-scale computer simulation and symbol manipulation systems. A coordinate-free formulation of nonsingular perturbation theory is given, from which a new Hamiltonian perturbation structure is derived and related to the unperturbed structure in five different ways. The theory of perturbations in the presence of symmetry is developed, and the method of averaging is related to reduction by a circle group action. The pseudo-forces and magnetic Poisson bracket terms due to reduction are given a natural asymptotic interpretation. Similar terms due to changing reference frames are related to the method of variation of parameters, which is also given a Hamiltonian formulation. These methods are used to answer a long- standing question posed by Kruskal about nearly periodic systems. The answer leads to a new secular perturbation theory that contains no ad hoc elements, which is then applied to gyromotion. Eikonal wave theory is given a Hamiltonian formulation that generalizes Whitham’s Lagrangian approach. The evolution of wave action density on ray phase space is given a Hamiltonian structure using a Lie-Poisson bracket. The relationship between dissipative and Hamiltonian systems is discussed. A theory motivated by free electron lasers gives new restrictions on the change of area of projected parallelepipeds under canonical transformations. A new type of attractor is defined which attracts both forward and backward in time and is shown to occur in infinite- dimensional Hamiltonian systems with dissipative behavior. The theory of Smale horseshoes is applied to gyromotion in the neighborhood of a magnetic field reversal and the phenomenon of reinsertion in area- preserving horseshoes is introduced. The central limit theorem is proved by renormalization group techniques. A natural symplectic structure for thermodynamics is shown to arise asymptotically from the maximum entropy formalism in the same way the structure for classical mechanics arises from quantum mechanics via path integrals. The new structure for thermodynamics is used to generalize Maxwell’s equal area rule”.

MSC:

58Z05 Applications of global analysis to the sciences
82-02 Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to statistical mechanics
37-02 Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to dynamical systems and ergodic theory
37J99 Dynamical aspects of finite-dimensional Hamiltonian and Lagrangian systems
37N99 Applications of dynamical systems
70Hxx Hamiltonian and Lagrangian mechanics
37J40 Perturbations of finite-dimensional Hamiltonian systems, normal forms, small divisors, KAM theory, Arnol’d diffusion
82C28 Dynamic renormalization group methods applied to problems in time-dependent statistical mechanics