Paper 2, Section II, D

Variational Principles | Part IB, 2021

A particle of unit mass moves in a smooth one-dimensional potential V(x)V(x). Its path x(t)x(t) is such that the action integral

S[x]=abL(x,x˙)dtS[x]=\int_{a}^{b} L(x, \dot{x}) d t

has a stationary value, where aa and b>ab>a are constants, a dot denotes differentiation with respect to time tt

L(x,x˙)=12x˙2V(x)L(x, \dot{x})=\frac{1}{2} \dot{x}^{2}-V(x)

is the Lagrangian function and the initial and final positions x(a)x(a) and x(b)x(b) are fixed.

By considering S[x+ϵξ]S[x+\epsilon \xi] for suitably restricted functions ξ(t)\xi(t), derive the differential equation governing the motion of the particle and obtain an integral expression for the second variation δ2S\delta^{2} S.

If x(t)x(t) is a solution of the equation of motion and x(t)+ϵu(t)+O(ϵ2)x(t)+\epsilon u(t)+O\left(\epsilon^{2}\right) is also a solution of the equation of motion in the limit ϵ0\epsilon \rightarrow 0, show that u(t)u(t) satisfies the equation

u¨+V(x)u=0\ddot{u}+V^{\prime \prime}(x) u=0

If u(t)u(t) satisfies this equation and is non-vanishing for atba \leqslant t \leqslant b, show that

δ2S=12ab(ξ˙u˙ξu)2dt\delta^{2} S=\frac{1}{2} \int_{a}^{b}\left(\dot{\xi}-\frac{\dot{u} \xi}{u}\right)^{2} d t

Consider the simple harmonic oscillator, for which

V(x)=12ω2x2V(x)=\frac{1}{2} \omega^{2} x^{2}

where 2π/ω2 \pi / \omega is the oscillation period. Show that the solution of the equation of motion is a local minimum of the action integral, provided that the time difference bab-a is less than half an oscillation period.

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