Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- I Stability in Hamiltonian Systems: Applications to the restricted three-body problem (K.R. Meyer)
- II A Crash Course in Geometric Mechanics (T.S. Ratiu)
- III The Euler-Poincaré variational framework for modeling fluid dynamics (D.D. Holm)
- IV No polar coordinates (R.H. Cushman)
- V Survey on dissipative KAM theory including quasi-periodic bifurcation theory (H. Broer)
- VI Symmetric Hamiltonian Bifurcations (J.A. Montaldi)
IV - No polar coordinates (R.H. Cushman)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- I Stability in Hamiltonian Systems: Applications to the restricted three-body problem (K.R. Meyer)
- II A Crash Course in Geometric Mechanics (T.S. Ratiu)
- III The Euler-Poincaré variational framework for modeling fluid dynamics (D.D. Holm)
- IV No polar coordinates (R.H. Cushman)
- V Survey on dissipative KAM theory including quasi-periodic bifurcation theory (H. Broer)
- VI Symmetric Hamiltonian Bifurcations (J.A. Montaldi)
Summary
From the lecturer
R.C. would like to thank the organizer Dr. James Montaldi of the Mechanics and Symmetry Euro Summer School which was held in Peyresq, France in September 2–16, 2000 for inviting him to give several lectures on integrable Hamiltonian systems.
R.C. declines to take any credit for the contents of these notes even though he helped write and typeset them, contributed his scratchy notes to the preparers, and wrote up his homework
(sec. D).The principal printed source which should be read along with these notes is the “blue book”.
Avant propos
It is a great pleasure for me to introduce these lecture notes. In the last few years after our first meeting in 1997 I have been constantly learning from Richard Cushman and am glad to be one of his co-workers. What I appreciate the most in Richard's lectures and in his work is that he presents and studies modern mathematics based on examples of concrete dynamical systems which he considers in great detail. As such his approach is very accessible to physicists and practitioners.
The five lectures are presented in the way they were given, except for interchanging Lecture IV and V back to their intended logical order. Some comments and discussion are added separately at the end of each lecture. The idea of these lecture notes is to give a very informal introduction to Richard's work. We even tried to preserve some of the style of Richard's presentation peppered with such phrases as “don't be caught dead in the water”,“you will eat crow”,“sneaky gadget”,“dirty trick”, “this is deep”, etc.
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- Information
- Geometric Mechanics and SymmetryThe Peyresq Lectures, pp. 211 - 302Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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