Title: The Game of Billiards
1The Game of Billiards
- By Anna Rapoport (from my proposal)
2Boltzmanns Hypothesis a Conjecture for
centuries?
- The gas of hard balls is a classical model in
statistical physics. - Boltzmanns Ergodic Hypothesis (1870) For large
systems of interacting particles in equilibrium
time averages are close to the ensemble, or
equilibrium average. - Let ? is a measurement, a function on a phase
space, equilibrium measure µ, and let f be a
time evolution of a phase space point. - One should define in which sense it converges.
- It took time until the mathematical object of the
EH was found.
3The First Mean Ergodic Theorem
- In 1932 von Neumann proved the first ergodic
thorem - Let M be an abstract space (the phase space) with
a probability measure µ, f M ? M is a measure
preserving transformation (?(f -1(A) ) ?(A) for
any measurable A), ? ? L2(?),as n ? 8 - Birkhoff proved that this convergence is a.e.
- Remind the system is ergodic if for every A,
?(A) 0 or 1.
4From Neumann to Sinai (1931-1970)
- 1938-39, Hedlung and Hopf found a method for
demonstrating the ergodicity of geodesic flows on
compact manifolds of negative curvature. They
have shown that here hyperbolicity implies
ergodicity. - 1942, Krylov discovered that the system of hard
balls show the similar instability. - 1963, The Boltzmann-Sinai Ergodic Hypothesis The
system of N hard balls given on T2 or T3 is
ergodic for any N? 2. - No large N is assumed!
- 1970, Sinai verified this conjecture for N2 on
T2.
5Trick
Boltzmann problem N balls in some reservoir
Billiard problem 1 ball in higher dimensional
phase space
6Mechanical Model
7Constants of motion
- Note that the kinetic energy is constant (set
H1/2) - If the reservoir is a torus T3 (no collisions
with a boundary) then also the total momentum is
conserved (set P0) - Also assume B0
8Billiards
- Billiard is a dynamical system describing the
motion of a point particle in a connected,
compact domain Q ? Rd or Td, with a piecewise
Ck-smooth (k2) boundary with elastic collisions
from it (def from Szácz).
9More Formally
- D ? Rd or Td (d 2) is a compact domain
configuration space - S is a boundary, consists of Ck (d-1)-dim
submanifolds - Singular set
- Particle has coordinate q(q1,,qd)? D and
velocity v(v1,,vd)? Rd
Inside D
m1??pv
10Reflection
- The angle of incidence is equal to the angle of
reflection elastic collision.
- The incidence angle ???-?/2?/2
- ?? ??/2?corresponds to tangent trajectories
11Phase Space
- H is preserved ? p1
- PD?Sd-1 is a phase space
- ? tP ? P is a billiard flow
- By natural cross-sections reduce flow to map
- Cross-section hypersurface transversal to a
flow - dim P (2d-2) and P? P (It consists of all
possible outgoing velocity vectors resulting from
reflections at S. Clearly, any trajectory of the
flow crosses the surface P every time it
reflects.) - This defines the Poincaré return map
T - billiard map
12Singularities of Billiard Map
13Statistical Properties
- Invariant measure under the billiard flow
- CLT
- Decay of correlation
(?(n)e-?n, ?(n)n-?)
14A little bit of History
- For Anosov diffeomorfisms Sinai, Ruelle and Bowen
proved the CLT in 70th, at the same time the exp.
decay of correlation was established. - 80th Bunimovich, Sinai, Chernov proved CLT for
chaotic billiards recently Young, Chernov showed
that the correlation decay is exponential. - It finally becomes clear that for the purpose of
physical applications, chaotic billiards behave
just like Anosov diffeomorphisms.
15Lyapunov exponents indicator of chaos in the
system
- If the curvature of every boundary component is
bounded, then Oseledec theorem guarantees the
existence of 2d-2 Lyapunov exponents at a.e.
point of P. - Moreover their sum vanishes
16Integrability
- Classical LiouvilleTheorem (mid 19C) in
Hamiltonian dynamics of finite N d.o.f.
generalized coordinates conjugate momenta
Poisson brackets If
conserved quantities Kj as many d.o.f.N are
found system can be reduced
to action-angle variables by quadrature only.
17Integrable billiards
- Ellipse, circle.
- Any classical ellipsoidal billiard is integrable
(Birkhoff). - Conjecture (Birkhoff-Poritski) Any 2-dimensional
integrable smooth, convex billiard is an ellipse. - Veselov (91) generalized this conjecture to
n-dim. - Delshams et el showed that the Conjecture is
locally true (under symmetric entire perturbation
the ellipsoidal billiard becomes non-integrable).
18Convex billiards
- In 1973 Lazutkin proved if D is a strictly
convex domain (the curvature of the boundary
never vanishes) with sufficiently smooth
boundary, then there exists a positive measure
set N?P that is foliated by invariant curves (he
demanded 553 deriv., Douady proved for 6(conj.
4)). - The billiard cannot be ergodic since N has a
positive measure. The Lyapunov exponents for
points x?N are zero. Away from N the dynamics
might be quite different. - Smoothness!!! The first convex billiard, which is
ergodic and hyperbolic (its boundary C1 not C2)
is a Bunimovich stadium.
19Stadium-like billiards
- A closed domain Q with the boundary consisting
of two focusing curves. - Mechanism of chaos after reflection the narrow
beam of trajectories is defocused before the next
reflection (defocusing mechanism, proved also in
d-dim). - Billiard dynamics determined by the parameter b
- b
- b a/2 -- ergodic
20Dispersing Billiards
- If all the components of the boundary are
dispersing, the billiard is said to be
dispersing. If there are dispersing and neutral
components, the billiard is said to be
semi-dispersing. - Sinai introduced them in 1970, proved (2 disks on
2 torus) that 2-d dispersing billiards are
ergodic. In 1987 Sinai and Chernov proved it for
higher dimensions (2 balls on d torus). - The motion of more than 2 balls on Td is already
semi-dispersing. 1999 Simáni and Szász showed
that N balls on Td system is completely
hyperbolic, countable number of ergodic
components, they are of positive measure and
K-mixing. - 2003 they showed that the system is B-mixing.
Try to play
21Generic Hamiltonian
- Theorem (Markus, Meyer 1974) In the space of
smooth Hamiltonians - The nonergodic ones form a dense subset
- The nonintegrable ones form a dense subset.
The Generic Hamiltonian possesses a mixed phase
space. The islands of stability (KAM islands) are
situated in chaotic sea. Examples cardioid,
non-elliptic convex billiards, mushroom.
22Billiards with a mixed PS
- The mushroom billiard was suggested by
Bunimovich. It provides continuous transition
from chaotic stadium billiard to completely
integrable circle billiard. The system also
exhibit easily localized chaotic sea and island
of stability.
23Mechanisms of Chaos
Integrabiliy (Ellipse) - divergence and
convergence of neighboring orbits are balanced
Defocusing (Stadium) - divergence of neighboring
orbits (in average) prevails over convergence
Dispersing (Sinai billiards) - neighboring orbits
diverge
24Adding Smooth Potential
- High pressure and low temperature the hard
sphere model is a poor predictor of gas
properties. - Elastic collisions could be replaced by
interaction via smooth potential. - Donnay examined the case of two particles with a
finite range potential on a T2 and obtained
stable elliptic periodic orbit non-ergodic. - V.Rom-Kedar and Turaev considered the effect of
smoothing of potential of dispersing billiards.
In 2-dim it can give rise to elliptic islands.
25Current Results
- Generalization of billiard-like potential to
d-dim. - Conditions for smooth convergence of a smooth
Hamiltonian flow to a singular billiard flow. - Convergence Theorem is proved.
26Research Plan
- Consider one of the 3-dim billiards built by Nir
Davidsons group. Investigate its ergodic
properties, study phase space. - Find a mechanism which gives an elliptic
point of a Poincaré map of a smooth
Hamiltonian system (d-dim) (multiple
tangency, corner going trajectories) - Find whether the return map is non-linearly
stable, so that KAM applies. - The resonances will naturally arise.