20 Classical mechanics
+U(r 1 (q 1 ,...,q 3 N),...,rN(q 1 ,...,q 3 N)). (1.6.10)
Given the Hamiltonian (as a Legendre transform of the Lagrangian), one can obtain
the equations of motion for the system from the Hamiltonian using
q ̇α=
∂H
∂pα
, p ̇α=−
∂H
∂qα
. (1.6.11)
Eqns. (1.6.11) are known asHamilton’s equations of motion. Whereas the Euler–
Lagrange equations constitute a set of 3Nsecond-order differential equations, Hamil-
ton’s equations constitute an equivalent set of 6N first-order differential equations.
When subject to the same initial conditions, the Euler–Lagrange and Hamiltonian
equations of motion must yield the same trajectory.
Hamilton’s equations must be solved subject to a set of initial conditions on the
coordinates and momenta,{q 1 (0),...,q 3 N(0),p 1 (0),...,p 3 N(0)}. Eqns. (1.6.11) are com-
pletely equivalent to Newton’s second law of motion. In order to see this explicitly, let
us apply Hamilton’s equations to the simple Cartesian Hamiltonian of eqn. (1.6.3):
r ̇i=
∂H
∂pi
=
pi
mi
p ̇i=−
∂H
∂ri
=−
∂U
∂ri
=Fi(r). (1.6.12)
Taking the time derivative of both sides of the first equation and substituting the
result into the second yields
̈ri=
p ̇i
mi
p ̇i=mi ̈ri=Fi(r 1 ,...,rN), (1.6.13)
which shows that Hamilton’s equations reproduce Newton’s second law of motion. The
reader should check that the application of Hamilton’s equations to asimple harmonic
oscillator, for whichH=p^2 / 2 m+kx^2 /2, yields the equation of motionm ̈x+kx= 0.
Hamilton’s equations conserve the total Hamiltonian:
dH
dt
= 0. (1.6.14)
SinceHis the total energy, eqn. (1.6.14) is just the law of energy conservation. In
order to see thatHis conserved, we simply compute the time derivative dH/dtvia
the chain rule in generalized coordinates:
dH
dt
=
∑^3 N
α=1
[
∂H
∂qα
q ̇α+
∂H
∂pα
p ̇α