Exact solutions of classical central-force problems

In the classical central-force problem of classical mechanics, some potential energy functions V(r) produce motions or orbits that can be expressed in terms of well-known functions, such as the trigonometric functions and elliptic functions. This article describes these functions and the corresponding solutions for the orbits.

General problem

The Binet equation for u(φ) can be solved numerically for nearly any central force F(1/u). However, only a handful of forces result in formulae for u in terms of known functions. The solution for φ can be expressed as an integral over u

A central-force problem is said to be "integrable" if this integration can be solved in terms of known functions.

If the force is a power law, i.e., if F(r) = α rn, then u can be expressed in terms of circular functions and/or elliptic functions if n equals 1, -2, -3 (circular functions) and -7, -5, -4, 0, 3, 5, -3/2, -5/2, -1/3, -5/3 and -7/3 (elliptic functions).[1]

If the force is the sum of an inverse quadratic law and a linear term, i.e., if F(r) = α r-2 + c r, the problem also is solved explicitly in terms of Weierstrass elliptic functions[2]

gollark: It is annoying that networking is so overly dependent on central towers and such even though mesh networking would be more efficient and reliable.
gollark: Technically, that would be classist.
gollark: Speed cameras work by detecting your car via reflected visible light photons. I don't think they can detect high-energy gamma rays. If you go fast enough, something something doppler effect and you will no longer be visible to it.
gollark: To escape speeding tickets, it's also worth accelerating to relativistic velocities.
gollark: Oh, I see.

References

  1. Whittaker, pp. 8095.
  2. Izzo and Biscani

Bibliography

  • Whittaker ET (1937). A Treatise on the Analytical Dynamics of Particles and Rigid Bodies, with an Introduction to the Problem of Three Bodies (4th ed.). New York: Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-521-35883-5.
  • Izzo,D. and Biscani, F. (2014). Exact Solution to the constant radial acceleration problem. Journal of Guidance Control and Dynamic.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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