Fr. 207.00

Canonical Perturbation Theories - Degenerate Systems and Resonance

English · Paperback / Softback

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Canonical Perturbation Theories, Degenerate Systems and Resonance presents the foundations of Hamiltonian Perturbation Theories used in Celestial Mechanics, emphasizing the Lie Series Theory and its application to degenerate systems and resonance.
This book is the complete text on the subject including advanced topics in Hamiltonian Mechanics, Hori's Theory, and the classical theories of Poincaré, von Zeipel-Brouwer, and Delaunay. Also covered are Kolmogorov's frequency relocation method to avoid small divisors, the construction of action-angle variables for integrable systems, and a complete overview of some problems in Classical Mechanics.
Sylvio Ferraz-Mello makes these ideas accessible not only to Astronomers, but also to those in the related fields of Physics and Mathematics.

List of contents

The Hamilton-Jacobi Theory.- Angle-Action Variables. Separable Systems.- Classical Perturbation Theories.- Resonance.- Lie Mappings.- Lie Series Perturbation Theory.- Non-Singular Canonical Variables.- Lie Series Theory for Resonant Systems.- Single Resonance near a Singularity.- Nonlinear Oscillators.

Summary

The book is written mainly to advanced graduate and post-graduate students following courses in Perturbation Theory and Celestial Mechanics. It is also intended to serve as a guide in research work and is written in a very explicit way: all perturbation theories are given with details allowing its immediate application to real problems. In addition, they are followed by examples showing all steps of their application.

Additional text

From the reviews:

"The book consists of 10 chapters and four appendices. … Undoubtedly, the monograph will be useful for postgraduate students." (Sergei Georgievich Zhuravlev, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1122 (24), 2007)

"The book by Sylvio Ferraz-Mello provides a deep insight in perturbation theories. … the mathematical presentation of the different facets is always accompanied by a number of case studies and examples. Such peculiarity makes the book unique … . Thanks to the … author, the book is recommended for both teaching and research purposes: the didactical and self-contained aspects address the book to advanced undergraduate students; the researchers in Dynamical Systems and Celestial Mechanics will certainly enjoy the excellent and deep presentation of perturbation theories." (Alessandra Celletti, Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, Vol. 100 (4), 2008)

"The purpose of this book is … ‘to deal with the perturbation theories used in Celestial Mechanics, but they should be presented in a universal way, so as to be understandable by investigators and students from related fields of science.’ In other words, one does not need a special background in astronomy to read and understand the book. … a large number of the examples will be of interest to people working in Hamiltonian theory. … a valuable source of material on conservative systems." (Ferdinand Verhulst, SIAM Review, Vol. 50 (2), 2008)

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From the reviews:

"The book consists of 10 chapters and four appendices. ... Undoubtedly, the monograph will be useful for postgraduate students." (Sergei Georgievich Zhuravlev, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1122 (24), 2007)
"The book by Sylvio Ferraz-Mello provides a deep insight in perturbation theories. ... the mathematical presentation of the different facets is always accompanied by a number of case studies and examples. Such peculiarity makes the book unique ... . Thanks to the ... author, the book is recommended for both teaching and research purposes: the didactical and self-contained aspects address the book to advanced undergraduate students; the researchers in Dynamical Systems and Celestial Mechanics will certainly enjoy the excellent and deep presentation of perturbation theories." (Alessandra Celletti, Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, Vol. 100 (4), 2008)
"The purpose of this book is ... 'to deal with the perturbation theories used in Celestial Mechanics, but they should be presented in a universal way, so as to be understandable by investigators and students from related fields of science.' In other words, one does not need a special background in astronomy to read and understand the book. ... a large number of the examples will be of interest to people working in Hamiltonian theory. ... a valuable source of material on conservative systems." (Ferdinand Verhulst, SIAM Review, Vol. 50 (2), 2008)

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