NEWTONIAN THREE-BODY PROBLEM

PERIODIC TRAJECTORIES AND TOPOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION

Veljko Dmitrašinović ,Milovan Šuvakov

Laboratory for gaseous electronics
Center for non-equilibrium processes
Institute of physics Belgrad


Seminar at Beihang University, Beijing, 8th May 2013.

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My collaborators Pavle and Milovan Šuvakov - The engines driving this project

Talk based on a recent paper:

OUTLINE

  • MOTIVATION: a personal message to students
  • PROBLEM DEFINITION: review of the two-body problem
  • KNOWN ORBITS: classical and more recent
  • CLASSIFICATION OF ORBITS: braids, shape sphere
  • HUNT FOR NEW SOLUTIONS
  • CONCLUSIONS, OUTLOOK, OPEN QUESTIONS

[www.phdcomics.com]

PERSONAL MOTIVATION

  • A MESSAGE TO STUDENTS:
    WHY (NOT) WORK ON AGE-OLD PROBLEMS?
  • IMPORTANCE OF NEW METHODS:
    SYNERGY OF ANALYTIC AND NUMERICAL WORK

MOTIVATION

TWO-BODY PROBLEM

  • Configuration space dimension: 2 x 2 = 4
  • Phase space dimension: 2 x 4 = 8
  • Conservation laws:
    1. energy: 1
    2. CM motion: 2 + 2
    3. angular momentum: 1
    4. Laplace-Runge-Lenz vector - 1
  • Maximally super-integrable system (solutions?)

THREE-BODY PROBLEM

  • Configuration space dimension: 3 x 2 = 6
  • Phase space dimension: 2 x 4 = 12
  • Conservation laws:
    1. energy: 1
    2. CM motion: 2 + 2
    3. angular momentum: 1
    4. remnant: 6 = 3 + 3
  • No more [H. Bruns, Acta Math. 11, 25 (1887) ]

THREE-BODY PROBLEM

  • Solutions can be:
    • bounded / unbounded
    • periodic / quasi-periodic / chaotic
  • H. Poincare:
... what makes these (periodic) solutions so precious to us, is that they are, so to say, the only opening through which we can try to penetrate in a place which, up to now, was supposed to be inaccessible

KNOWN ORBITS

  • Three classical orbits:
    1. Free fall
    2. Euler sln (1767), one body in the middle - always unstable
    3. Lagrange sln (1772), stable only for very unequal masses
  • Only 2. and 3. collisionless
  • Only 3. (potentially) stable

Classical orbits in astronomy:

  • Lagrange orbits:
    • Trojans: Achilles, Patroclus, Hector, Nestor (1905 and after)
    • Sun - Mars - 5261 Eureka (1990), to date two more:
    • SOHO and two missions to L1, and two to L2
  • Horseshoe orbit (in the restricted three-body problem) between two Lagrange points: L4 and L5
    • Sun - Earth - 3753 Cruithne (1986)

MORE RECENT ORBITS

  • Space travel and modern electronic computers revived interest in this field in the 1960’s.
  • Two (infinite) families (angular mom. is the free parameter) of periodic three-body orbits were found in the mid-1970’s by Broucke and by Henon.
  • Interest subsided until 1990’s.

MOORE'S ORBITS

  • Moore found numerically several new orbits, among them:
    [C. Moore, Phys Rev Lett 70 3675 (1993)]
  • A new orbit that belongs to the same family as Euler's and Lagrange slns and presents an equal mass analogon of the horseshoe orbit.
  • The famous "figure-8" solution

FIGURE-8

  • Chenciner and Montgomery rediscovered and formally proved existence in 2000.
    [A. Chenciner, R. Montgomery, Ann. of Math. 152 881-901 (2000)]
  • We found this orbit in two other potentials ($\Delta$ and Y-string)
    [M. Šuvakov, V. Dmitrašinović, Phys Rev E 83 056603 (2011)]
  • Moore's PRL was the first attempt at classification ...

MOORE'S FIGURE-8

APPLET



BRAIDS

JACOBI COORDINATES

$$\rho = \frac{1}{\sqrt{2}} (\mathbf{x}_1-\mathbf{x}_2)$$ $$\lambda = \frac{1}{\sqrt{6}} (\mathbf{x}_1+\mathbf{x}_2-2 \mathbf{x}_3)$$ Complicated representation of permutation symmetry!

SHAPE SPHERE

$$ \vec n = (n_x^{'},n_y^{'},n_z^{'}) = \left(\frac{2 {\vec \rho} \cdot {\vec \lambda}}{R^2}, \frac{\lambda^2 - \rho^2}{R^2}, \frac{2 ({\vec \rho} \times {\vec \lambda}) \cdot \vec e_z}{R^2} \right ) $$ $$R = \sqrt{\rho^{2} + \lambda^{2}}$$ Simple representation of permutation group!

CLASSIFICATION OF ORBITS


  • Sphere without three points ~ plane w/o two
  • Conjugation classes of a free group on two elements.
  • For better legibility $A=a^{-1}$, $B=b^{-1}$.
  • Broucke-Henon --- $a$
  • Moore's figure eight --- $abAB$

BROUCKE-HENON & EIGHT

HUNT FOR NEW SOLUTIONS: ASSUMPTIONS

  • Motion in a plane
  • Equal masses
  • Newtonian interaction ($-1/r$ potential)
  • Under these conditions: permutation symmetry important, angular momentum is a "scalar", and the two-body collision configurations are the only singularities of the potential.

METHODS

  • Runge-Kutta-Fehlberg method (RKF45)
  • Accumulated error during one period $\sim 10^{-12}$
  • Finding a solution is an optimisation problem
  • Phase space: 6-dimensional
    • Scaling: -1
    • Collinear configuration: -1
    • Middle point: -1
    • $R'(0)=0$: -1
  • Zero angular momentum $L=0$

SOLUTIONS


explain the classes!

BUTTERFLY I

MOTH I

DRAGONFLY

GOGGLES

YIN-YANG I

BUTTERFLY IV

HUNTING GROUNDS

CONCLUSIONS, OUTLOOK

  • We have:
    • Found new solutions
    • Used the topological classification method (first time)
  • Future:
    • Check of stability
    • Extend to different masses and angular momenta
    • Other systems (He atom with Coulomb interaction)
  • Deeper questions: Why?

QUESTIONS ?


HUNTING GROUND - EARLY STEPS

Similarities with Tasman's voyages?

Routes of Tasman's two voyages: are we missing Australia here?

Similarities with open-pit mining for diamonds?

Kimberley "Big Hole" diamond mine in SA yielded 2,720 kilograms of diamonds; it was dug out by hand.

Open-pit mining for diamonds

The Big Hole has a surface of 17 hectares and is 463 metres wide. It was excavated to a depth of 240 metres, but then partially infilled with debris reducing its depth to about 215 metres. It was hand-dug from 1871 to 1914 by up to 50,000 miners at a time.

Deep mining for diamonds

After 1914 the the kimberlite pipe was mined underground to a depth of 1,097 metres (machine excavated).

Modern open-pit mining for diamonds

The Cullinan mine (SA) has yielded the world's two largest polished diamonds found thus far.

Results of modern open-pit mining

The (1985) Golden Jubilee Diamond, at 545.67 carats (109.13 g); the 1905 Cullinan diamond, (uncut at 3106.75 carats, or 603.35 g), that produced two british crown jewels, the "Great Star of Africa", at 530.4 carats (106.1 g), and the First of the "Lesser Stars of Africa", at 317.4 carats (63.5 g).

Deep mining for three-body orbits

As we search for further orbits, their periods increase. It is like going deeper and deeper into a mine. Therefore, pretty soon we shall have to turn to machine-helped searches ("excavations") of periodic three-body orbits.