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Mathematical Methods For Theoretical Physics Sheets

This document provides an introduction to mathematical methods for theoretical physics. It covers topics such as fluid mechanics in two dimensions using complex potentials, stereographic projection mapping a sphere to a plane, Euler-Lagrange equations with constraints, and angular momentum conservation from rotational invariance in classical mechanics and general relativity particle dynamics.

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Giorgio Li
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
54 views5 pages

Mathematical Methods For Theoretical Physics Sheets

This document provides an introduction to mathematical methods for theoretical physics. It covers topics such as fluid mechanics in two dimensions using complex potentials, stereographic projection mapping a sphere to a plane, Euler-Lagrange equations with constraints, and angular momentum conservation from rotational invariance in classical mechanics and general relativity particle dynamics.

Uploaded by

Giorgio Li
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Mathematical Methods for Theoretical Physics Sheets

May 2022

Introduction
0.0.1 Fluid Mechanics in two dimensions
Consider a fluid with velocity ⃗v (t, ⃗r) and a mass density ρ(t, ⃗r). The current density is ⃗j = ρ⃗v and satisfies the continuity
equation:
∂ρ
+ ∇ · ⃗j = 0 (1)
∂t
which expresses mass conservation. Indeed, if M (t) is total mass of fluid inside the volume V , Gauss Theorem gives
Z Z Z I
dM d ∂ρ 3
= ρd3 x = d x=− ∇ · ⃗jd3 x = − ⃗j · ⃗nd2 a. (2)
dt dt V V ∂t V ∂V

Where the last integral corresponds to the flux of ⃗j through the closed boundary ∂V of the volume V . For steady flow ρ constant
and incompressible ρ uniform the continuity equation leads to the condition:

∇ · ⃗v = 0 =⇒ ⃗
⃗v = ∇ × A (3)

If the flow is irrotational then:


∇ × ⃗v = 0 =⇒ ⃗v = ∇ϕ. (4)
⃗ is perpendicular to the plane where the fllow occurs, and thus has only one compone
In two dimensions the vector potential A
ψ(the stream function) and
⃗v = ∂y ψ î − ∂x ψ ĵ (5)
By definition of ϕ, lines of constant potential are perpendicular to the velocity and

⃗v = ∂x ϕî + ∂y ϕĵ (6)

We see that ϕ and ψ satisfy the Cauchy-Riemann equations, such that one can define a complex potential

F (z) = ϕ + iψ (7)

The ”complex velocity” V is then obtained from the derivative of F :


dF
= ∂x F = ∂x ϕi + ∂x ψ = vx − ivy ≡ V (8)
dz

0.0.2 Example
The flow around a cylinder of radius a, centered on the origin, is given by the complex potential

a2
 
Γ z 
F (z) = V0 z + −i ln (9)
z 2π a

where V0 is the uniform velocity, far away from the cylinder and along the x-axis, and Γ is the circulation of the flow around the
cylinder. Indeed, in terms of polar coordinates z = reiθ we have

a2
 
Γθ
ϕ = V0 r + cos θ + (10)
r 2π

such that
a2 a2
   
Γ
vr = V 0 r + cos θ, vθ = −V0 r + sin θ + (11)
r r 2πr
and we have the following properties
The velocity is uniform for |z| → ∞ and in this limit:

vx = vr cos θ − vθ sin θ = V0 , vy = vr sin θ + vθ cos θ = 0 (12)

The radial velocity vr vanishes on the surface of the cylinder r = a


The countour itnegral of the velocity along a circle or radius R > a and centered on the origin is
I Z 2π
⃗v d⃗l = Rvθ dθ = Γ (13)
0

Γ
There are two stagnation points on the cylinder, defined by vθ = 0, located at the angles θs and π − θs such that sin θs = 4πaV0
0.0.3 Stereographic projection
This projection corresponds to a mapping from the sphere or radius 1 to the plane which contains its equation. For this, one
draws a straight line from the north pole N to a point M in the plane. The intersection P of this line with the sphere defines
the mapping P ↔ M . The south hemisphere is mapped on the disc centered on the origin with radius 1; the north hemisphere
is mapped onto the rest of the plane, with the north pole mapped ont he circle of infinite radius. A point P on the sphere
has coordinates (x1 , x2 , x3 ) with x21 + x22 + x23 = 1. If M in the plane has coordinates z = x + iy, the line N M is defined by
N⃗M = tN⃗P , where t is a real parameter such that (x, y, −1) = t(x1 , x2 , x3 −1), which, after eliminating t, leads to the one-to-one
map z = x1−x
1 +ix2
3
. If one applies the Mobius transformation f (z) = 1/z to the previous result one obtains:
1 − x3 x1 − ix2
f (z) = = (14)
x1 + ix2 1 + x3
which corresponds to a rotation of angle π about the x1 -axis of the original point P .

0.0.4 Euler Lagrange with constraints


The Euler Lagrange equation with constraints is given by:
 
∂L d ∂L ∂ϕ
= +λ ϕ=0 (15)
∂qi dt ∂ q̇i ∂qi
where λ is the lagrange multiplier and ϕ is the constraint.
Example non-relativistic motion on a sphere A point particle of mass m and moving freely on the surface of a sphere of radius
R is described by the Lagrangian and constraint:
m 2
ẋ + ẏ 2 + ż 2 ϕ = x2 + y 2 + z 2 − R 2 = 0

L= (16)
2
and the equations of motions imply:
mẍ + 2λx = 0, mÿ + 2λy = 0, mz̈ + 2λz = 0, (17)
Eliminating λ from these equations, one obtains
d d d
ẍy − xÿ = (ẋy − xẏ) = 0, ẍz − xz̈ = (ẋz − xż) = 0 z̈y − z ÿ = (ży − z ẏ) = 0 (18)
dt dt dt
which expresses angular momentum conservation, as expected.

0.0.5 Invariance under rotation and angular momentum conservation


A non relativistic point particle in a central potential is described by a Lagrangian of the form L = 21 m⃗v 2 − U (|⃗r|) which is
invariant under any rotation of the vector position ⃗r. The infinitesimal 3-d rotation matrix R around the direction α
⃗ , with angle
α = |⃗
α| ≪ 1, leads to R⃗r = ⃗r + α
⃗ × ⃗r + ... where dots represents higher orders in α, such that
X X
Rij rj = ri + δri δri αj rk ϵijk (19)
j j,k

The corresponding Noether charge is then


X
Q= mvi αj rk ϵijk = m(⃗r × ⃗v ) = J⃗ · α
⃗ (20)
ijk

where J⃗ is the angular momentum. The latter charge is conserved for any infinitesimal α
⃗ , such that angular momentum is
conserved.

0.0.6 General Relativity Particle


Note: use Einstein Summation notation. The lagrangian for the particle is L = 21 gij (⃗x)ẋi xj , where a dot represnets a derivative
with respect to τ and the space time metric g is symmetric gij = gji . The inverse metric has components denoted by g ij
such that gik g kj = δij . Show that the geodesic equations are ẍk + Γkij ẋi ẋj = 0. Where the Christoffel symbols are Γ ≡
1 kl
2 g (∂i glj + ∂j gil − ∂l gij ).
Using Euler Lagrange equations we have ∂l L = 1/2∂l ẋi ẋj . ∂˙l L = 1/2gij (δli ẋj + δlj ẋi ) = 1/2(glj ẋj + gil ẋi ).
∂τ (∂l L) = 1/2(∂i glj + ∂j gil )ẋi ẋj + gli ẍi . By combining the two equations we obtain:
1
gli ẍi + (∂i glj + ∂j gil − ∂l gij )ẋi ẋj = 0 (21)
2
and a multiplication by g kl finally gives the expected equation.
0.0.7 Condensed matter Lagrangian
The lagrangian for a set of N coupled oscillators with identical masses is L = m 2⃗q˙2 − 12 ⃗qT K⃗q where K is the coupling constant
matrix, with symmetric components Kij = Kji and eigenvalues ki . Show that, after an appropriate change of variable ⃗q → ⃗q′
and p⃗ → p⃗′ , the energy hypersurfaces in phase space (⃗q′ , p⃗′ ) are (2N − 1) dimensional ellipsoids.
The conjugate momenta for the cooridnates ⃗q are p⃗ ≡ ∂L ∂q⃗˙
= m⃗q˙. The hamiltonian reads H = ⃗q˙ · p⃗ − L = p2 /2m + 1/2⃗qT K⃗q One
can rotate the coordinate system to the eigenvector basis for K, ⃗ such that the phase space coordinates become ⃗q′ = R⃗q and

p⃗ = R⃗p, where R is the rotation matrix. In this rotation, K is transformed in a diagonal matrix ∆, with its eigenvalues ki on
the diagonal, and one has K = R−1 ∆R. Since R−1 = RT , the new hamiltonian is:

p′2 1
H → H′ = + ⃗q′T ∆⃗q′ (22)
2m 2
PN
An energy hypersurface E = H ′ satisfies i aqi2 + bp2i = 1 which is an ellipsoid of dimension 2N − 1.

0.0.8 Integral of Green’s function


0.0.9 Joukowski transformation
The motivation for this transformation z → ξ is to map a circle into an airfoil-like shape, in order to describe the flow of air
around an airfoil. It is defined by
a2
 
1
ξ= z+ (23)
2 z
where a is real. This transformation is conformal, except for z = ±a, where ξ ′ (z) = 0, and it leads to the following shapes.
Circle centered on the origin with radius a: z = aeiθ , ξ = a cos θ such that the Joukowski image is the segment [−a, a] on the
real axis. Circle centered on the origin, with radius R > a: z = Reiθ . One defines ξ = X + iY with

a2 a2
   
1 1
X= R+ cos θ Y = R− sin θ (24)
2 R 2 R

such that

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