TY - JOUR
T1 - Isochrony in 3D Radial Potentials
T2 - From Michel Hénon’s Ideas to Isochrone Relativity: Classification, Interpretation and Applications
AU - Simon-Petit, Alicia
AU - Perez, Jérôme
AU - Duval, Guillaume
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2018/10/1
Y1 - 2018/10/1
N2 - Revisiting and extending an old idea of Michel Hénon, we geometrically and algebraically characterize the whole set of isochrone potentials. Such potentials are fundamental in potential theory. They appear in spherically symmetrical systems formed by a large amount of charges (electrical or gravitational) of the same type considered in mean-field theory. Such potentials are defined by the fact that the radial period of a test charge in such potentials, provided that it exists, depends only on its energy and not on its angular momentum. Our characterization of the isochrone set is based on the action of a real affine subgroup on isochrone potentials related to parabolas in the R2 plane. Furthermore, any isochrone orbits are mapped onto associated Keplerian elliptic ones by a generalization of the Bohlin transformation. This mapping allows us to understand the isochrony property of a given potential as relative to the reference frame in which its parabola is represented. We detail this isochrone relativity in the special relativity formalism. We eventually exploit the completeness of our characterization and the relativity of isochrony to propose a deeper understanding of general symmetries such as Kepler’s Third Law and Bertrand’s theorem.
AB - Revisiting and extending an old idea of Michel Hénon, we geometrically and algebraically characterize the whole set of isochrone potentials. Such potentials are fundamental in potential theory. They appear in spherically symmetrical systems formed by a large amount of charges (electrical or gravitational) of the same type considered in mean-field theory. Such potentials are defined by the fact that the radial period of a test charge in such potentials, provided that it exists, depends only on its energy and not on its angular momentum. Our characterization of the isochrone set is based on the action of a real affine subgroup on isochrone potentials related to parabolas in the R2 plane. Furthermore, any isochrone orbits are mapped onto associated Keplerian elliptic ones by a generalization of the Bohlin transformation. This mapping allows us to understand the isochrony property of a given potential as relative to the reference frame in which its parabola is represented. We detail this isochrone relativity in the special relativity formalism. We eventually exploit the completeness of our characterization and the relativity of isochrony to propose a deeper understanding of general symmetries such as Kepler’s Third Law and Bertrand’s theorem.
U2 - 10.1007/s00220-018-3212-y
DO - 10.1007/s00220-018-3212-y
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85050352925
SN - 0010-3616
VL - 363
SP - 605
EP - 653
JO - Communications in Mathematical Physics
JF - Communications in Mathematical Physics
IS - 2
ER -