In classical mechanics, a Liouville dynamical system is an exactly soluble dynamical system in which the kinetic energyT and potential energyV can be expressed in terms of the s generalized coordinates q as follows: The solution of this system consists of a set of separably integrable equations where E = T + V is the conserved energy and the are constants. As described below, the variables have been changed from qs to φs, and the functions us and ws substituted by their counterparts χs and ωs. This solution has numerous applications, such as the orbit of a small planet about two fixed starsunder the influence of Newtonian gravity. The Liouville dynamical system is one of several things named after Joseph Liouville, an eminent French mathematician.
Let the fixed centers of attraction be located along the x-axis at ±a. The potential energy of the moving particle is given by The two centers of attraction can be considered as the foci of a set of ellipses. If either center were absent, the particle would move on one of these ellipses, as a solution of the Kepler problem. Therefore, according to Bonnet's theorem, the same ellipses are the solutions for the bicenter problem. Introducing elliptic coordinates, the potential energy can be written as and the kinetic energy as This is a Liouville dynamical system if ξ and η are taken as φ1 and φ2, respectively; thus, the function Y equals and the function W equals Using the general solution for a Liouville dynamical system below, one obtains Introducing a parameter u by the formula gives the parametric solution Since these are elliptic integrals, the coordinates ξ and η can be expressed as elliptic functions of u.
Constant of motion
The bicentric problem has a constant of motion, namely, from which the problem can be solved using the method of the last multiplier.
Derivation
New variables
To eliminate the v functions, the variables are changed to an equivalent set giving the relation which defines a new variable F. Using the new variables, the u and w functions can be expressed by equivalent functions χ and ω. Denoting the sum of the χ functions by Y, the kinetic energy can be written as Similarly, denoting the sum of the ω functions by W the potential energy V can be written as
The Lagrange equation for the rth variable is Multiplying both sides by, re-arranging, and exploiting the relation 2T = YF yields the equation which may be written as where E = T + V is the total energy. It follows that which may be integrated once to yield where the are constants of integration subject to the energy conservation Inverting, taking the square root and separating the variables yields a set of separably integrable equations: