University Physics Notes: Classical Mechanics – Canonical Transformations
Coordinate transformations or changes of variables are useful
because a suitable choice of coordinates or variables can
dramatically simplify a problem. For example
cannot
be evaluated by inspection but on using
the
integral becomes
on
using the original substitution to express in terms of![]()
Many integrals can be evaluated in this way by finding a symmetry of the problem and using a substitution which expresses this symmetry. Problems involving circular motion are best expressed in polar co0rdinates therefore and the motion for the electron around a hydrogen atom is best expressed in spherical polar coordinates because the electrostatic potential is spherically symmetrical.
The choice of a generalised coordinate q leads to the expression
for the Lagrangian and to the Hamiltonian via the Legendre
transformation, with the generalised momentum defined as
The
choice of
is
arbitrary and any single valued choice of
will
give rise to the same Lagrangian and Hamiltonian equation of motion.
We can often make the resulting equations simpler by making using
transformed coordinate
where
both
and
(the
new coordinates) are functions of p and q (the old coordinates). If
we could for example find coordinates
such
that the Hamiltonian is a function of
only
then the resulting system would be trivial to solve.
Unfortunately however not all transformations of this type preserve Hamilton's equations of motion so the system may not be Hamiltonian after the transformation. Those which preserve Hamilton's equations of motion have the property that the transformation matrix between the two coordinate systems has a constant determinant:
and![]()
Then
Obviously if the Jacobian matrix
has
a constant non zero determinant then unique
determines
a unique
and
the transformation is well defined. In If
then
the transformation is said to be canonical and area is preserved for
any curve in the phase diagram.