Evolution to mirror-symmetry in rotating systems
Publication date
2021-07-01
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Abstract
A natural example of evolution can be described by a time-dependent two degrees-of- freedom Hamiltonian. We choose the case where initially the Hamiltonian derives from a general cubic potential, the linearised system has frequencies 1 and ω > 0. The time-dependence produces slow evolution to discrete (mirror) symmetry in one of the degrees-of-freedom. This changes the dynamics drastically depending on the frequency ratio ω and the timescale of evolution. We analyse the cases ω = 1, 2, 3 where the ratio’s 1,2 turn out to be the most interesting. In an initial phase we find 2 adiabatic invariants with changes near the end of evolution. A remarkable feature is the vanishing and emergence of normal modes, stability changes and strong changes of the velocity distribution in phase-space. The problem is inspired by the dynamics of axisymmetric, rotating galaxies that evolve slowly to mirror symmetry with respect to the galactic plane, the model formulation is quite general.
Keywords
Discrete symmetry, Evolution, Resonance, Rotating systems, Computer Science (miscellaneous), Chemistry (miscellaneous), General Mathematics, Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous)
Citation
Verhulst, F 2021, 'Evolution to mirror-symmetry in rotating systems', Symmetry, vol. 13, no. 7, 7. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym13071189