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Revision as of 10:04, 10 February 2024

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The steep Nekhoroshev's theorem
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    The steep Nekhoroshev's theorem (English)
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    24 March 2016
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    The authors revisit Nekhoroshev's theorem on the exponential stability of nearly integrable real-analytic Hamiltonian systems [\textit{N. N. Nekhoroshev}, Usp. Mat. Nauk 32, No. 6(198), 5--66 (1977; Zbl 0383.70023); Tr. Semin. Im. I. G. Petrovskogo 5, 5--50 (1979; Zbl 0473.34021)]. In general terms, exponential stability means stability of the action variables over times that are exponentially long with the inverse of the size of the perturbation. The Hamiltonian in the standard action-angle coordinates is \[ H(I,\varphi)= h(I)+\varepsilon f(I,\varphi) \] with \((I,\varphi)\in U\times\mathbb{R}^n\), where \(U\) is an open region in \(\mathbb{R}^n\), \(\mathbb{T}^n\) is the standard flat torus, and \(\varepsilon\) is a small parameter. The authors prove that the exponential stability exponent can be taken to be \(a=1/(2n\alpha_i,\dots, \alpha_{n-2})\), where the \(\alpha_i\) are Nekhoroshev's steepness indices and \(n\geq 3\). Thus the authors improve the dependence of \(a^{-1}\) on \(n\), reducing it from Nekhoroshev's quadratic to linear dependence. They conjecture that the new stability exponent is optimal, and they produce a heuristic argument in support. The authors note that Nekhorovshev's proof consists of geometric analytic and stability pieces, and that special attention to the geometric piece was crucial in achieving their new result.
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    geometry of resonances
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    exponential stability in time
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    Hamiltonian system
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