Canonical Transformation

In Hamiltonian mechanics, a canonical transformation is a change of canonical coordinates (q,p,t) → (Q,P,t) that preserves the form of Hamilton's equations (that is, the new Hamilton equations that result from the new Hamiltonian constructed by transformation may be simply obtained by substituting the old variables by the new ones), although it might not preserve the Hamiltonian itself. This is sometimes known as form invariance. Canonical transformations are useful in their own right, and also form the basis for the Hamilton–Jacobi equations (a useful method for calculating conserved quantities) and Liouville's theorem (itself the basis for classical statistical mechanics).

Since Lagrangian mechanics is based on generalized coordinates, transformations of the coordinates qQ do not affect the form of Lagrange's equations and, hence, do not affect the form of Hamilton's equations if we simultaneously change the momentum by a Legendre transform into

Therefore, coordinate transformations (also called point transformations) are a type of canonical transformation. However, the class of canonical transformations is much broader, since the old generalized coordinates, momenta and even time may be combined to form the new generalized coordinates and momenta. Canonical transformations that do not include the time explicitly are called restricted canonical transformations (many textbooks consider only this type).

For clarity, we restrict the presentation here to calculus and classical mechanics. Readers familiar with more advanced mathematics such as cotangent bundles, exterior derivatives and symplectic manifolds should read the related symplectomorphism article. (Canonical transformations are a special case of a symplectomorphism.) However, a brief introduction to the modern mathematical description is included at the end of this article.

Read more about Canonical Transformation:  Notation, Direct Approach, Liouville's Theorem, Generating Function Approach, Motion As A Canonical Transformation, Modern Mathematical Description, History

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