Conserved quantity explained

A conserved quantity is a property or value that remains constant over time in a system even when changes occur in the system. In mathematics, a conserved quantity of a dynamical system is formally defined as a function of the dependent variables, the value of which remains constant along each trajectory of the system.[1]

Not all systems have conserved quantities, and conserved quantities are not unique, since one can always produce another such quantity by applying a suitable function, such as adding a constant, to a conserved quantity.

Since many laws of physics express some kind of conservation, conserved quantities commonly exist in mathematical models of physical systems. For example, any classical mechanics model will have mechanical energy as a conserved quantity as long as the forces involved are conservative.

Differential equations

See main article: articles and Differential equation. For a first order system of differential equations

dr
dt

=f(r,t)

where bold indicates vector quantities, a scalar-valued function H(r) is a conserved quantity of the system if, for all time and initial conditions in some specific domain,

dH
dt

=0

Note that by using the multivariate chain rule,

dH
dt

=\nablaH

dr
dt

=\nablaHf(r,t)

so that the definition may be written as

\nablaHf(r,t)=0

which contains information specific to the system and can be helpful in finding conserved quantities, or establishing whether or not a conserved quantity exists.

Hamiltonian mechanics

l{H}

, a function f of the generalized coordinates q and generalized momenta p has time evolution
df
dt

=\{f,l{H}\}+

\partialf
\partialt

and hence is conserved if and only if \ + \frac = 0. Here

\{f,l{H}\}

denotes the Poisson bracket.

Lagrangian mechanics

See main article: articles and Lagrangian mechanics. Suppose a system is defined by the Lagrangian L with generalized coordinates q. If L has no explicit time dependence (so \frac=0), then the energy E defined by

E=\sumi\left[

q

i

\partialL
\partial
q
i

\right]-L

is conserved.

Furthermore, if \frac = 0, then q is said to be a cyclic coordinate and the generalized momentum p defined by

p=

\partialL
\partial
q

is conserved. This may be derived by using the Euler–Lagrange equations.

See also

References

  1. Book: Blanchard, Devaney, Hall . Differential Equations . Brooks/Cole Publishing Co . 2005 . 486 . 0-495-01265-3.