PaperSwipe

Notes on relative equilibria of isosceles molecules in classical approximation

Published 7 years agoVersion 1arXiv:1810.03058

Authors

Damaris McKinley, Daniel Pasca, Cristina Stoica

Categories

math.DS

Abstract

We study a classical model of isosceles triatomic "A-B-A" molecules. The atoms, considered mass points, interact mutually via a generic repulsive-attractive binary potential. First we show that the steady states, or relative equilibria (RE), corresponding to rotations about the molecule symmetry axis may be determined qualitatively assuming the knowledge of 1) the shape of the binary interaction potential, 2) the equilibrium diatomic distances (i.e., the equilibrium bond length) of the A-A and A-B molecules, and 3) the distance at which the RE of the diatomic A-A molecule ceases to exist. No analytic expression for the interaction potentials is needed. Second we determine the stability of the isosceles RE modulo rotations using geometric mechanics methods and using Lennard-Jones diatomic potentials. As a by-product, we verify the qualitative results on RE existence and bifurcation. For isosceles RE we employ the Reduced Energy-Momentum method presented in [J.E. Marsden, Lectures in Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 1992], whereas for linear (trivial isosceles) RE we apply the Symplectic Slice method, a technique based on the findings in the paper [R.M. Roberts, T. Schmah and C. Stoica, Relative equilibria for systems with configurations space isotropy, J. Geom. Phys., 56, 762, (2006)].

Notes on relative equilibria of isosceles molecules in classical approximation

7 years ago
v1
3 authors

Categories

math.DS

Abstract

We study a classical model of isosceles triatomic "A-B-A" molecules. The atoms, considered mass points, interact mutually via a generic repulsive-attractive binary potential. First we show that the steady states, or relative equilibria (RE), corresponding to rotations about the molecule symmetry axis may be determined qualitatively assuming the knowledge of 1) the shape of the binary interaction potential, 2) the equilibrium diatomic distances (i.e., the equilibrium bond length) of the A-A and A-B molecules, and 3) the distance at which the RE of the diatomic A-A molecule ceases to exist. No analytic expression for the interaction potentials is needed. Second we determine the stability of the isosceles RE modulo rotations using geometric mechanics methods and using Lennard-Jones diatomic potentials. As a by-product, we verify the qualitative results on RE existence and bifurcation. For isosceles RE we employ the Reduced Energy-Momentum method presented in [J.E. Marsden, Lectures in Mechanics, Cambridge University Press, 1992], whereas for linear (trivial isosceles) RE we apply the Symplectic Slice method, a technique based on the findings in the paper [R.M. Roberts, T. Schmah and C. Stoica, Relative equilibria for systems with configurations space isotropy, J. Geom. Phys., 56, 762, (2006)].

Authors

Damaris McKinley, Daniel Pasca, Cristina Stoica

arXiv ID: 1810.03058
Published Oct 6, 2018

Click to preview the PDF directly in your browser