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physics-handbook/concepts/advanced/projectile-hj.tex
Krishna Ayyalasomayajula 1c1a575f6e feat(HJ): Chapter 3 — Advanced Analytical Mechanics (Hamilton-Jacobi)
Add Chapter 3 with 13 concept files covering:
- HJ Fundamentals: derivation, separation, action-angle, EM coupling
- Mechanics problems: free particle, projectile, SHO, Kepler, rigid rotator
- EM problems: uniform E-field, cyclotron, E×B drift, Coulomb

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\subsection{Projectile Motion via Hamilton-Jacobi}
This subsection solves the Hamilton--Jacobi equation for projectile motion in a uniform gravitational field, showing that Jacobi's theorem reproduces the standard parabolic kinematics of the AP Physics C curriculum.
\dfn{Projectile Hamiltonian}{
A particle of mass $m$ moving in the $xy$-plane under uniform gravity $g$ has the Hamiltonian
\[
\mcH = \frac{p_x^2 + p_y^2}{2m} + mgy,
\]
where $y$ is measured upward from ground level and $p_x$, $p_y$ are the canonical momenta conjugate to $x$ and $y$, respectively. The corresponding Hamilton--Jacobi equation $\mcH + \pdv{\mcS}{t} = 0$ reads
\[
\frac{1}{2m}\left[\left(\pdv{\mcS}{x}\right)^2 + \left(\pdv{\mcS}{y}\right)^2\right] + mgy + \pdv{\mcS}{t} = 0.
\]}
\nt{The coordinate $x$ is cyclic (ignorable) because it does not appear in the Hamiltonian. Its conjugate momentum $p_x = \pdv{\mcS}{x}$ is therefore a constant of motion, which mirrors the familiar AP result that horizontal velocity remains unchanged during projectile motion.}
\thm{Separated Hamilton--Jacobi equations for the projectile}{
Using the time-independent ansatz $\mcS(x,y,t) = W_x(x) + W_y(y) - Et$, the full Hamilton--Jacobi PDE reduces to two ordinary equations. Because $x$ is cyclic, $\der{W_x}{x} = \alpha_x$ (constant). The remaining vertical equation is
\[
\frac{1}{2m}\left(\der{W_y}{y}\right)^2 + mgy = E - \frac{\alpha_x^2}{2m} \equiv E_y,
\]
where $\alpha_x$ is the constant horizontal momentum and $E_y$ is the transverse energy carrying the vertical kinetic and potential energy.}
\pf{Separation and trajectory from Jacobi's theorem}{
Begin with the time-independent reduction $\mcS = W_x(x) + W_y(y) - Et$. Substituting into the Hamilton--Jacobi PDE, the time derivative contributes $-E$ and the spatial partial derivatives become ordinary derivatives:
\[
\frac{1}{2m}\left[\left(\der{W_x}{x}\right)^2 + \left(\der{W_y}{y}\right)^2\right] + mgy = E.
\]
The coordinate $x$ is cyclic, so its derivative is a constant:
\[
\der{W_x}{x} = \alpha_x,
\]
which integrates immediately to $W_x(x) = \alpha_x\,x$. Substitute back into the energy equation:
\[
\frac{1}{2m}\left(\der{W_y}{y}\right)^2 + mgy = E - \frac{\alpha_x^2}{2m}.
\]
Define the transverse energy $E_y = E - \alpha_x^2/(2m)$ and solve for the vertical derivative:
\[
\der{W_y}{y} = \pm\sqrt{2m\left(E_y - mgy\right)}.
\]
Integrate with respect to $y$. Set $u = E_y - mgy$, so $\dd u = -mg\,\dd y$:
\[
W_y(y) = \pm\sqrt{2m}\int\sqrt{E_y - mgy}\,\dd y
= \mp\frac{2\sqrt{2m}}{3mg}\left(E_y - mgy\right)^{3/2}.
\]
Assemble the complete principal function:
\[
\mcS(x,y,t) = \alpha_x x \mp\frac{2\sqrt{2m}}{3mg}\left(E_y - mgy\right)^{3/2} - Et.
\]
Jacobi's theorem with respect to the separation constant $\alpha_x$ gives
\[
\pdv{\mcS}{\alpha_x} = x - \frac{\alpha_x}{m}\,t = \beta_x.
\]
Solving for $x(t)$ with $\beta_x = 0$ (launch from the origin):
\[
x(t) = \frac{\alpha_x}{m}\,t = v_{0x}\,t.
\]
From Jacobi's theorem with respect to $E$, using $\pdv{E_y}{E} = 1$:
\[
\pdv{\mcS}{E} = \mp\frac{2\sqrt{2m}}{3mg}\cdot\frac{3}{2}\left(E_y - mgy\right)^{1/2} - t = \beta_E,
\]
which simplifies to
\[
\mp\frac{\sqrt{2m}}{mg}\sqrt{E_y - mgy} - t = \beta_E.
\]
Solve the squared relation for $y(t)$. At $t = 0$ the particle is at $y = 0$ with vertical speed $v_{0y} = \sqrt{2E_y/m}$. The initial conditions fix $\beta_E$ and yield
\[
y(t) = v_{0y}\,t - \frac{1}{2}\,g\,t^2.
\]
The two equations combine into the parabolic trajectory $y = (v_{0y}/v_{0x})\,x - \tfrac{g}{2v_{0x}^2}\,x^2$.}
\nt{Comparison to AP kinematics}{The Hamilton--Jacobi equations $x(t) = v_{0x}t$ and $y(t) = v_{0y}t - \tfrac{1}{2}gt^2$ are identical to the standard AP C constant-acceleration kinematics. The separation constant $\alpha_x = mv_{0x}$ is the conserved horizontal momentum, and the transverse energy $E_y = \tfrac{1}{2}mv_{0y}^2$ encodes the initial vertical kinetic energy. The HJ approach thus reproduces, from first principles, every projectile-motion result derived elementarily in the AP C syllabus.}
\qs{Projectile launched from the ground}{
A projectile of mass $m = 0.50\,\mathrm{kg}$ is launched from the origin with speed $v_0 = 20\,\mathrm{m/s}$ at angle $\theta_0 = 30.0^\circ$ above the horizontal. Use $g = 9.81\,\mathrm{m/s^2}$.
\begin{enumerate}[label=(\alph*)]
\item Separate the Hamilton--Jacobi equation. Show that $x$ is cyclic and find $\der{W_y}{y}$ in terms of $E_y$ and $y$.
\item Compute the separation constant $\alpha_x = m v_0\cos\theta_0$ and the transverse energy $E_y = \tfrac{1}{2}m v_0^2\sin^2\theta_0$.
\item From the trajectory equations, find the range $R$, the horizontal distance at which the projectile returns to $y = 0$. Verify with $R = v_0^2\sin(2\theta_0)/g$.
\end{enumerate}}
\sol \textbf{Part (a).} The time-independent Hamilton--Jacobi equation is
\[
\frac{1}{2m}\left[\left(\der{W_x}{x}\right)^2 + \left(\der{W_y}{y}\right)^2\right] + mgy = E.
\]
The coordinate $x$ does not appear in the Hamiltonian, so $x$ is cyclic and
\[
\der{W_x}{x} = \alpha_x.
\]
Substitute $(\der{W_x}{x})^2 = \alpha_x^2$ back:
\[
\frac{1}{2m}\left(\der{W_y}{y}\right)^2 + mgy = E - \frac{\alpha_x^2}{2m} \equiv E_y.
\]
Solve for the vertical derivative:
\[
\der{W_y}{y} = \pm\sqrt{2m\left(E_y - mgy\right)}.
\]
\textbf{Part (b).} The separation constant is the horizontal momentum:
\[
\alpha_x = m v_0\cos\theta_0.
\]
Substitute the numerical values:
\[
\alpha_x = (0.50)(20)\cos(30.0^\circ)\,\mathrm{kg\!\cdot\!m/s}.
\]
Using $\cos(30.0^\circ) = \sqrt{3}/2 \approx 0.8660$,
\[
\alpha_x = (0.50)(20)(0.8660)\,\mathrm{kg\!\cdot\!m/s} = 8.66\,\mathrm{kg\!\cdot\!m/s}.
\]
The transverse energy is
\[
E_y = \tfrac{1}{2}\,m\,v_0^2\sin^2\theta_0.
\]
The vertical speed component is
\[
v_{0y} = v_0\sin(30.0^\circ) = (20)(0.500)\,\mathrm{m/s} = 10.0\,\mathrm{m/s}.
\]
Therefore,
\[
E_y = \tfrac{1}{2}(0.50)(10.0)^2\,\mathrm{J} = 25\,\mathrm{J}.
\]
\textbf{Part (c).} The time of flight is found from requiring $y(T) = 0$:
\[
v_{0y}\,T - \frac{1}{2}\,g\,T^2 = 0.
\]
The nonzero root is
\[
T = \frac{2v_{0y}}{g} = \frac{2(10.0)}{9.81}\,\mathrm{s} = 2.04\,\mathrm{s}.
\]
The range is the horizontal distance traveled during this time:
\[
R = v_{0x}\,T = \left(v_0\cos\theta_0\right)T.
\]
The horizontal speed is $v_{0x} = (20)\cos(30.0^\circ)\,\mathrm{m/s} = 17.3\,\mathrm{m/s}$. Hence,
\[
R = (17.3)(2.04)\,\mathrm{m} = 35\,\mathrm{m}.
\]
Verify with the elementary range formula:
\[
R = \frac{v_0^2\sin(2\theta_0)}{g}
= \frac{(20)^2\sin(60.0^\circ)}{9.81}\,\mathrm{m}
= \frac{(400)(0.8660)}{9.81}\,\mathrm{m}
= 35\,\mathrm{m}.
\]
The two results agree to the stated number of significant figures.
Therefore,
\[
\alpha_x = 8.66\,\mathrm{kg\!\cdot\!m/s},
\qquad
E_y = 25\,\mathrm{J},
\qquad
R = 35\,\mathrm{m}.
\]