Poisson bracket

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Template:Short description

Siméon Denis Poisson

Template:Sidebar with collapsible lists In mathematics and classical mechanics, the Poisson bracket is an important binary operation in Hamiltonian mechanics, playing a central role in Hamilton's equations of motion, which govern the time evolution of a Hamiltonian dynamical system. The Poisson bracket also distinguishes a certain class of coordinate transformations, called canonical transformations, which map canonical coordinate systems into canonical coordinate systems. A "canonical coordinate system" consists of canonical position and momentum variables (below symbolized by qi and pi, respectively) that satisfy canonical Poisson bracket relations. The set of possible canonical transformations is always very rich. For instance, it is often possible to choose the Hamiltonian itself H=H(q,p,t) as one of the new canonical momentum coordinates.

In a more general sense, the Poisson bracket is used to define a Poisson algebra, of which the algebra of functions on a Poisson manifold is a special case. There are other general examples, as well: it occurs in the theory of Lie algebras, where the tensor algebra of a Lie algebra forms a Poisson algebra; a detailed construction of how this comes about is given in the universal enveloping algebra article. Quantum deformations of the universal enveloping algebra lead to the notion of quantum groups.

All of these objects are named in honor of Siméon Denis Poisson. He introduced the Poisson bracket in his 1809 treatise on mechanics.[1][2]

Properties

Given two functions Template:Mvar and Template:Mvar that depend on phase space and time, their Poisson bracket {f,g} is another function that depends on phase space and time. The following rules hold for any three functions f,g,h of phase space and time:

Anticommutativity
{f,g}={g,f}
Bilinearity
{af+bg,h}=a{f,h}+b{g,h},{h,af+bg}=a{h,f}+b{h,g},a,b
Leibniz's rule
{fg,h}={f,h}g+f{g,h}
Jacobi identity
{f,{g,h}}+{g,{h,f}}+{h,{f,g}}=0

Also, if a function k is constant over phase space (but may depend on time), then {f,k}=0 for any f.

Definition in canonical coordinates

In canonical coordinates (also known as Darboux coordinates) (qi,pi) on the phase space, given two functions f(pi,qi,t) and g(pi,qi,t),[Note 1] the Poisson bracket takes the form {f,g}=i=1N(fqigpifpigqi).

The Poisson brackets of the canonical coordinates are {qk,ql}=i=1N(qkqiqlpiqkpiqlqi)=i=1N(δki00δli)=0,{pk,pl}=i=1N(pkqiplpipkpiplqi)=i=1N(0δliδki0)=0,{qk,pl}=i=1N(qkqiplpiqkpiplqi)=i=1N(δkiδli00)=δkl, where δij is the Kronecker delta.

Hamilton's equations of motion

Hamilton's equations of motion have an equivalent expression in terms of the Poisson bracket. This may be most directly demonstrated in an explicit coordinate frame. Suppose that f(p,q,t) is a function on the solution's trajectory-manifold. Then from the multivariable chain rule, ddtf(p,q,t)=fqdqdt+fpdpdt+ft.

Further, one may take p=p(t) and q=q(t) to be solutions to Hamilton's equations; that is, dqdt=Hp={q,H},dpdt=Hq={p,H}.

Then ddtf(p,q,t)=fqHpfpHq+ft={f,H}+ft.

Thus, the time evolution of a function f on a symplectic manifold can be given as a one-parameter family of symplectomorphisms (i.e., canonical transformations, area-preserving diffeomorphisms), with the time t being the parameter: Hamiltonian motion is a canonical transformation generated by the Hamiltonian. That is, Poisson brackets are preserved in it, so that any time t in the solution to Hamilton's equations, q(t)=exp(t{H,})q(0),p(t)=exp(t{H,})p(0), can serve as the bracket coordinates. Poisson brackets are canonical invariants.

Dropping the coordinates, ddtf=(t{H,})f.

The operator in the convective part of the derivative, iL^={H,}, is sometimes referred to as the Liouvillian (see Liouville's theorem (Hamiltonian)).

Poisson matrix in canonical transformations

Template:Main The concept of Poisson brackets can be expanded to that of matrices by defining the Poisson matrix.

Consider the following canonical transformation:η=[q1qNp1pN]ε=[Q1QNP1PN]Defining M:=(𝐐,𝐏)(𝐪,𝐩), the Poisson matrix is defined as 𝒫(ε)=MJMT, where J is the symplectic matrix under the same conventions used to order the set of coordinates. It follows from the definition that:𝒫ij(ε)=[MJMT]ij=k=1N(εiηkεjηN+kεiηN+kεjηk)=k=1N(εiqkεjpkεipkεjqk)={εi,εj}η.

The Poisson matrix satisfies the following known properties:𝒫T=𝒫|𝒫|=1|M|2𝒫1(ε)=(M1)TJM1=(ε)

where the (ε) is known as a Lagrange matrix and whose elements correspond to Lagrange brackets. The last identity can also be stated as the following:k=12N{ηi,ηk}[ηk,ηj]=δijNote that the summation here involves generalized coordinates as well as generalized momentum.

The invariance of Poisson bracket can be expressed as: {εi,εj}η={εi,εj}ε=Jij, which directly leads to the symplectic condition: MJMT=J.[3]

Constants of motion

An integrable system will have constants of motion in addition to the energy. Such constants of motion will commute with the Hamiltonian under the Poisson bracket. Suppose some function f(p,q) is a constant of motion. This implies that if p(t),q(t) is a trajectory or solution to Hamilton's equations of motion, then along that trajectory:0=dfdtWhere, as above, the intermediate step follows by applying the equations of motion and we assume that f does not explicitly depend on time. This equation is known as the Liouville equation. The content of Liouville's theorem is that the time evolution of a measure given by a distribution function f is given by the above equation.

If the Poisson bracket of f and g vanishes ({f,g}=0), then f and g are said to be in involution. In order for a Hamiltonian system to be completely integrable, n independent constants of motion must be in mutual involution, where n is the number of degrees of freedom.

Furthermore, according to Poisson's Theorem, if two quantities A and B are explicitly time independent (A(p,q),B(p,q)) constants of motion, so is their Poisson bracket {A,B}. This does not always supply a useful result, however, since the number of possible constants of motion is limited (2n1 for a system with n degrees of freedom), and so the result may be trivial (a constant, or a function of A and B.)

The Poisson bracket in coordinate-free language

Let M be a symplectic manifold, that is, a manifold equipped with a symplectic form: a 2-form ω which is both closed (i.e., its exterior derivative dω vanishes) and non-degenerate. For example, in the treatment above, take M to be 2n and take ω=i=1ndqidpi.

If ιvω is the interior product or contraction operation defined by (ιvω)(u)=ω(v,u), then non-degeneracy is equivalent to saying that for every one-form α there is a unique vector field Ωα such that ιΩαω=α. Alternatively, ΩdH=ω1(dH). Then if H is a smooth function on M, the Hamiltonian vector field XH can be defined to be ΩdH. It is easy to see that Xpi=qiXqi=pi.

The Poisson bracket  {,} on Template:Math is a bilinear operation on differentiable functions, defined by {f,g}=ω(Xf,Xg); the Poisson bracket of two functions on Template:Math is itself a function on Template:Math. The Poisson bracket is antisymmetric because: {f,g}=ω(Xf,Xg)=ω(Xg,Xf)={g,f}.

Furthermore, Template:NumBlk

Here Template:Math denotes the vector field Template:Math applied to the function Template:Math as a directional derivative, and Xgf denotes the (entirely equivalent) Lie derivative of the function Template:Math.

If Template:Math is an arbitrary one-form on Template:Math, the vector field Template:Math generates (at least locally) a flow ϕx(t) satisfying the boundary condition ϕx(0)=x and the first-order differential equation dϕxdt=Ωα|ϕx(t).

The ϕx(t) will be symplectomorphisms (canonical transformations) for every Template:Math as a function of Template:Math if and only if Ωαω=0; when this is true, Template:Math is called a symplectic vector field. Recalling Cartan's identity Xω=d(ιXω)+ιXdω and Template:Math, it follows that Ωαω=d(ιΩαω)=dα. Therefore, Template:Math is a symplectic vector field if and only if α is a closed form. Since d(df)=d2f=0, it follows that every Hamiltonian vector field Template:Math is a symplectic vector field, and that the Hamiltonian flow consists of canonical transformations. From Template:EquationNote above, under the Hamiltonian flow Template:Math, ddtf(ϕx(t))=XHf={f,H}.

This is a fundamental result in Hamiltonian mechanics, governing the time evolution of functions defined on phase space. As noted above, when Template:Math, Template:Math is a constant of motion of the system. In addition, in canonical coordinates (with {pi,pj}={qi,qj}=0 and {qi,pj}=δij), Hamilton's equations for the time evolution of the system follow immediately from this formula.

It also follows from Template:EquationNote that the Poisson bracket is a derivation; that is, it satisfies a non-commutative version of Leibniz's product rule: Template:NumBlk

The Poisson bracket is intimately connected to the Lie bracket of the Hamiltonian vector fields. Because the Lie derivative is a derivation, vιuω=ιvuω+ιuvω=ι[v,u]ω+ιuvω.

Thus if Template:Math and Template:Math are symplectic, using vω=0=uω, Cartan's identity, and the fact that ιuω is a closed form, ι[v,u]ω=vιuω=d(ιvιuω)+ιvd(ιuω)=d(ιvιuω)=d(ω(u,v)).

It follows that [v,u]=Xω(u,v), so that Template:NumBlk

Thus, the Poisson bracket on functions corresponds to the Lie bracket of the associated Hamiltonian vector fields. We have also shown that the Lie bracket of two symplectic vector fields is a Hamiltonian vector field and hence is also symplectic. In the language of abstract algebra, the symplectic vector fields form a subalgebra of the Lie algebra of smooth vector fields on Template:Math, and the Hamiltonian vector fields form an ideal of this subalgebra. The symplectic vector fields are the Lie algebra of the (infinite-dimensional) Lie group of symplectomorphisms of Template:Math.

It is widely asserted that the Jacobi identity for the Poisson bracket, {f,{g,h}}+{g,{h,f}}+{h,{f,g}}=0 follows from the corresponding identity for the Lie bracket of vector fields, but this is true only up to a locally constant function. However, to prove the Jacobi identity for the Poisson bracket, it is sufficient to show that: ad{g,f}=ad{f,g}=[adf,adg] where the operator adg on smooth functions on Template:Math is defined by adg()={,g} and the bracket on the right-hand side is the commutator of operators, [A,B]=ABBA. By Template:EquationNote, the operator adg is equal to the operator Template:Math. The proof of the Jacobi identity follows from Template:EquationNote because, up to the factor of -1, the Lie bracket of vector fields is just their commutator as differential operators.

The algebra of smooth functions on M, together with the Poisson bracket forms a Poisson algebra, because it is a Lie algebra under the Poisson bracket, which additionally satisfies Leibniz's rule Template:EquationNote. We have shown that every symplectic manifold is a Poisson manifold, that is a manifold with a "curly-bracket" operator on smooth functions such that the smooth functions form a Poisson algebra. However, not every Poisson manifold arises in this way, because Poisson manifolds allow for degeneracy which cannot arise in the symplectic case.

A result on conjugate momenta

Given a smooth vector field X on the configuration space, let PX be its conjugate momentum. The conjugate momentum mapping is a Lie algebra anti-homomorphism from the Lie bracket to the Poisson bracket: {PX,PY}=P[X,Y].

This important result is worth a short proof. Write a vector field X at point q in the configuration space as Xq=iXi(q)qi where qi is the local coordinate frame. The conjugate momentum to X has the expression PX(q,p)=iXi(q)pi where the pi are the momentum functions conjugate to the coordinates. One then has, for a point (q,p) in the phase space, {PX,PY}(q,p)=ij{Xi(q)pi,Yj(q)pj}=ijpiYj(q)XiqjpjXi(q)Yjqi=ipi[X,Y]i(q)=P[X,Y](q,p).

The above holds for all (q,p), giving the desired result.

Quantization

Poisson brackets deform to Moyal brackets upon quantization, that is, they generalize to a different Lie algebra, the Moyal algebra, or, equivalently in Hilbert space, quantum commutators. The Wigner-İnönü group contraction of these (the classical limit, Template:Math) yields the above Lie algebra.

To state this more explicitly and precisely, the universal enveloping algebra of the Heisenberg algebra is the Weyl algebra (modulo the relation that the center be the unit). The Moyal product is then a special case of the star product on the algebra of symbols. An explicit definition of the algebra of symbols, and the star product is given in the article on the universal enveloping algebra.

See also

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Remarks

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References

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