A conserved quantity for a given Trajectory. This is true of the Total Energy of a system, however other quantities can also be constants of motion
Properties
For a velocity independent force, an energy function is conserved iff the potential energy gradient is the symmetric of the force
is a Constant of Motion , where
- is the Energy function aka the Total Energy
- is the Potential energy
- is the velocity-independent Force
Proof
We differentiate the potential energy to get
Since changes over time, the derivative is zero iff
For a velocity dependent force, an energy function is conserved iff the force can be decomposed into a component resulting from potential energy, and a component where the force is orthogonal to the velocity
is a Constant of Motion , where
- , the Energy function aka the Total Energy
- , a smooth function representing the Potential energy
- , the velocity-dependent Force
- , the Force component not explained by the Potential energy
- is the velocity
Proof
Since the force is decomposed as , we get
Hence the Energy is constant iff is orthogonal to the velocity .
- I need to rename the results above so that they fit into nice notes.