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4.4: Preservation of Phase Space Volume and Liouville's Theorem

  • Page ID
    5104
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    Consider a phase space volume element \(dx_0\) at t=0, containing a small collection of initial conditions on a set of trajectories. The trajectories evolve in time according to Hamilton's equations of motion, and at a time t later will be located in a new volume element \(dx_t\) as shown in the figure below:

    img14.gif
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    How is \(dx_0\) related to \(dx_t\)dxdd ? To answer this, consider a trajectory starting from a phase space vector \(x_0\) in \(dx_0\) and having a phase space vector \(x_t\) at time \(t\) in \(dx_t\). Since the solution of Hamilton's equations depends on the choice of initial conditions, \(x_t\) depends on \(x_0\) :

    \[ \begin{align*} x_0 &= \left ( p_1 (0), \cdots , p_N(0), r_1(0), \cdots , r_N (0) \right ) \\[4pt] x_0 &= \left ( p_1 (t), \cdots , p_N(t), r_1(t), \cdots , r_N (t) \right ) \\[4pt] x^i_t &= x^i_t \left ( x^1_0 , \cdots , x^{6N}_0 \right ) \end{align*} \]

    Thus, the phase space vector components can be viewed as a coordinate transformation on the phase space from \(t=0\) to time \(t\). The phase space volume element then transforms according to

    \[ dx_t = J (x_t ; x_0 ) dx_0 \nonumber \]

    where \(J (x_t ; x_0 )\) is the Jacobian of the transformation:

    \[ J (x_t ; x_0 ) = \frac {\partial (x^1_t \cdots x^n_t )}{\partial (x^1_0 \cdots x^n_0 )} \nonumber \]

    where \(n=6N\). The precise form of the Jacobian can be determined as will be demonstrated below.

    The Jacobian is the determinant of a matrix \(M\),

    \[ J (x_t ; x_0 ) = \text {det} (M) = e^{TrlnM} \nonumber \]

    whose matrix elements are

    \[ M_{ij} = \frac {\partial x^i_t}{\partial x^j_0} \nonumber \]

    Taking the time derivative of the Jacobian, we therefore have

    \[ \frac {dJ}{dt} = Tr \left ( M^{-1} \frac {dM}{dt} \right ) e^{TrlnM} \nonumber \]

    \[ = J \sum _{i=1}^n \sum _{j=1}^n M^{-1}_{ij} \frac {dM_{ij}}{dt} \nonumber \]

    The matrices \(M_{-1} \) and \( \frac {dM}{dt} \) can be seen to be given by

    \[ M^{-1}_{ij} = \frac {\partial x^i_0}{\partial x^j_t} \nonumber \]

    \[\frac {dM_{ji}}{dt} = \frac {\partial \dot {x}^i_t}{\partial x^i_0} \nonumber \]

    Substituting into the expression for \(dJ/dt\) gives

    \[\begin{align*} \frac {dJ}{dt} &= J \sum _{i,j=1}^n \frac {\partial x^i_0}{\partial x^j_t} \frac {\partial \dot {x}^i_t}{\partial x^i_0} \\[4pt] &= J \sum _{i,j,k=1}^n \frac {\partial x^i_0}{\partial x^j_t} \frac {\partial \dot {x}^i_t}{\partial x^k_t} \frac {\partial x^k_t}{\partial x^i_0} \end{align*} \]

    where the chain rule has been introduced for the derivative \(\frac {\partial x^j_t}{\partial x^i_0}\). The sum over i can now be performed:

    \[\sum _{i=1}^n \frac {\partial x^i_0}{\partial x^j_t} \frac {\partial x^k_t}{\partial x^i_0} = \sum ^n_{i=1} M^{-1}_{ij} M_{ki} = \sum ^n_{i=1} M_{ki}M^{-1}_{ij} = \delta _{kj} \nonumber \]

    Thus,

    \[\frac {dJ}{dt} = J \sum ^n_{j,k=1} \delta _{jk} \frac {\partial \dot {x}^j_t}{\partial x^k_0} \nonumber \]

    \[ J \sum ^n_{j=1} \frac {\partial \dot {x}^j_t}{\partial x^j_t} = J \nabla _x \cdot \dot {x} \nonumber \]

    or

    \[ \frac {dJ}{dt} = J \nabla _x \cdot \dot {x} \nonumber \]

    The initial condition on this differential equation is \(J (0) \equiv J (x_0; x_0) = 1 \). Moreover, for a Hamiltonian system \(\nabla _x \cdot \dot {x} = 0 \). This says that \(dJ/dt=0\) and \(J(0)=1\). Thus, \(J (x_t ; x_0 ) = 1 \). If this is true, then the phase space volume element transforms according to

    \[ dx_o = dx_t \nonumber \]

    which is another conservation law. This conservation law states that the phase space volume occupied by a collection of systems evolving according to Hamilton's equations of motion will be preserved in time. This is one statement of Liouville's theorem.

    Combining this with the fact that \(df/dt=0\), we have a conservation law for the phase space probability:

    \[ f(x_o, o) dx_o = f(x_t,t)dx_t \nonumber \]

    which is an equivalent statement of Liouville's theorem.


    This page titled 4.4: Preservation of Phase Space Volume and Liouville's Theorem is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mark Tuckerman.