A nonlinear PDE for families of orbits on a given surface
Publication:2675793
DOI10.1007/s44198-022-00053-wzbMath1497.35020OpenAlexW4221107928WikidataQ114215768 ScholiaQ114215768MaRDI QIDQ2675793
Publication date: 26 September 2022
Published in: Journal of Nonlinear Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s44198-022-00053-w
nonlinear partial differential equationscomplex variablesmonoparametric families of orbitsdifferential geometry in physicsinverse problem of Newtonian dynamicstwo-dimensional potentials
Geometric theory, characteristics, transformations in context of PDEs (35A30) Differential geometric methods (tensors, connections, symplectic, Poisson, contact, Riemannian, nonholonomic, etc.) for problems in mechanics (70G45)
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Motion on a given surface: monoparametric families of orbits sufficient for separability
- On Szebehely's problem extended to holonomic systems with a given integral of motion
- On integrable Hamiltonians with velocity-dependent potentials
- Isoenergetic families of planar orbits generated by homogeneous potentials
- On Szebehely's problem for holonomic systems involving generalized potential functions
- Families of orbits in planar anisotropic fields
- Formulation intrinseque de l'equation de Szebehely (intrinsic formulation of Szebehely's equation)
- A unified transform method for solving linear and certain nonlinear PDEs
- Complex force fields and complex orbits
- On the determination of the generalized force field from a two-parametric family of orbits on a given surface
- Family boundary curves for holonomic systems with two degrees of freedom
- The inverse problem of dynamics: basic facts
- Generalization of Szebehely's equation
- On Szebehely's Inverse Problem for a Particle Describing Orbits on a Given Surface
This page was built for publication: A nonlinear PDE for families of orbits on a given surface