Dynamical systems

Dynamical billiards

A dynamical billiard is a dynamical system in which a particle alternates between free motion (typically as a straight line) and specular reflections from a boundary. When the particle hits the boundary it reflects from it without loss of speed (i.e. elastic collisions). Billiards are Hamiltonian idealizations of the game of billiards, but where the region contained by the boundary can have shapes other than rectangular and even be multidimensional. Dynamical billiards may also be studied on non-Euclidean geometries; indeed, the first studies of billiards established their ergodic motion on surfaces of constant negative curvature. The study of billiards which are kept out of a region, rather than being kept in a region, is known as outer billiard theory. The motion of the particle in the billiard is a straight line, with constant energy, between reflections with the boundary (a geodesic if the Riemannian metric of the billiard table is not flat). All reflections are specular: the angle of incidence just before the collision is equal to the angle of reflection just after the collision. The sequence of reflections is described by the billiard map that completely characterizes the motion of the particle. Billiards capture all the complexity of Hamiltonian systems, from integrability to chaotic motion, without the difficulties of integrating the equations of motion to determine its Poincaré map. Birkhoff showed that a billiard system with an elliptic table is integrable. (Wikipedia).

Dynamical billiards
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Musimathics: Dynamical Systems (Part 9)

Welcome to the Musimathics series! Musimathics gives an overview of some of the most interesting topics in the field of mathematical music theory! You are watching the ninth video in the series. In this video, Chloe goes over the basics of dynamics, as well as talking about some interesti

From playlist Musimathics: Music & Math

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A mystery billiard

This simulation implements a game idea due to several viewers: it shows the evolution of 20,000 particles in a billiard that is not visible. The aim of the game is to guess the shape of the billiard, which becomes easier as the simulation goes on. The shape of the billiard is revealed at t

From playlist Mystery billiards

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Mystery billiard 4

This is episode 4 of our mystery billiard game. The simulation shows the evolution of 5,000 particles in a billiard that is not visible. The aim of the game is to guess the shape of the billiard, which becomes easier as the simulation goes on. The shape of the billiard is revealed at the e

From playlist Mystery billiards

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Diana Davis: Interval exchange transformations from tiling billiards

Abstract: Tiling billiards is a dynamical system where beams of light refract through planar tilings. It turns out that, for a regular tiling of the plane by congruent triangles, the light trajectories can be described by interval exchange transformations. I will explain this surprising co

From playlist Dynamical Systems and Ordinary Differential Equations

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Diana Davis: Billiards on regular polygons

HYBRID EVENT Recorded during the meeting "Differential Geometry, Billiards, and Geometric Optics" the October 04, 2021 by the Centre International de Rencontres Mathématiques (Marseille, France) Filmmaker: Guillaume Hennenfent Find this video and other talks given by worldwide mathemat

From playlist Dynamical Systems and Ordinary Differential Equations

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Phasers locked on target: Phase evolution in the quantum hexagonal billiard

This simulation shows the same solutions of the Schrödinger equation in a hexagonal domain as the videos https://youtu.be/8WTIjRWjG1o and https://youtu.be/OJGTXVK3lpk but with a different representation. The hue represents the phase (or argument) of the wave function, while the luminosity

From playlist Billiards in polygons

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Sunset at Research Triangle Park

The angles of the triangle used here are 90°, 60° and 30°, making it half an equilateral triangle, that can be used to pave the plane. Therefore the dynamics of the billiard in this domain is regular, because the evolution of a circular wave front can be obtained by taking a circle of grow

From playlist Billiards in polygons

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The hexagonal quantum billiard: real part of the wave function

A solution to Schrödinger's equation in a hexagonal domain. Unlike previous simulations on this channel, this one shows the real part of the wave function, in order to highlight the wavelike behavior. We will see other representations later this week. The initial state is a Gaussian wave p

From playlist Billiards in polygons

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ECR Talk: "A tale of two (or more, integrable) billiards", Sean Gasiorek

SMRI -MATRIX Symposium: Nijenhuis Geometry and Integrable Systems Week 2 (MATRIX): ECR Talk by Sean Gasiorek 14 February 2022 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SMRI-MATRIX Joint Symposium, 7 – 18 Februar

From playlist MATRIX-SMRI Symposium: Nijenhuis Geometry and integrable systems

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Phase space representation of billiards interpolating between a circle and a hexagon

In this simulation, I wanted to see what happens when you continuously deform the boundary of a billiard from a circle to a regular hexagon. The billiard in a circle has very regular dynamics (the technical work is "integrable"), because a given trajectory always hits the boundary with the

From playlist Particles in billiards

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IMS Public Lecture: Butterflies, Cats, and Billiards in Polygons

Anton Zorich, Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7, France

From playlist Public Lectures

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From hyperbolic billiards to statistical physics - Peter Nandori

Analysis Seminar Topic: From hyperbolic billiards to statistical physics Speaker: Peter Nandori Affiliation: Yeshiva University; Member, School of Mathematics Date: April 19, 2021 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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Colloqui della Classe di Scienze: Corinna Ulcigrai, Slow Chaos - 2 febbraio 2022

Corinna Ulcigrai, University of Zurich - Switzerland. How can we understand chaotic behavior mathematically? A well popularized feature of chaotic systems is the butterfly effect: a small variation of initial conditions may lead to a drastically different future evolution, a mechanism at

From playlist Colloqui della Classe di Scienze

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Ellipses of small eccentricity are determined by their Dirichlet... - Steven Morris Zelditch

Analysis Seminar Topic: Ellipses of small eccentricity are determined by their Dirichlet (or, Neumann) spectra Speaker: Steven Morris Zelditch Affiliation: Northwestern University Date: April 28, 2020 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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Haptic Billiards: 1st Place Recipient #SimulinkChallenge2014

This video is a submission for the Matlab Simulink Student Design Challenge. Haptics is a discipline in robotics that allows us to interact with electronics via our sense of touch (Think of how your phone vibrations can provide you with information about powering on the device or hitting

From playlist 2014 Simulink Student Challenge

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On dynamical spectral rigidity and determination - Jacopo DeSimoi

Analysis Seminar Topic: On dynamical spectral rigidity and determination Speaker: Jacopo De Simoi Affiliation: University of Toronto Date: February 10, 2020 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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J. Smillie - Horocycle dynamics (Part 1)

A major challenge in dynamics on moduli spaces is to understand the behavior of the horocycle flow. We will motivate this problem and discuss what is known and what is not known about it, focusing on the genus 2 case. Specific topics to be covered include: * SL_2(R) orbit closures and inva

From playlist Ecole d'été 2018 - Teichmüller dynamics, mapping class groups and applications

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A tale of two conjectures: from Mahler to Viterbo - Yaron Ostrover

Members' Seminar Topic: A tale of two conjectures: from Mahler to Viterbo. Speaker: Yaron Ostrover Affiliation: Tel Aviv University, von Neumann Fellow, School of Mathematics Date: November 19, 2018 For more video please visit http://video.ias.edu

From playlist Mathematics

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Explanation of the butterfly effect and deterministic chaos using billiards

Created by George Datseris. In this relatively short education video I want to explain the butterfly effect and deterministic chaos at a fundamental level, using the simple and intuitive concept of billiards. Heavily inspired by 3Blue1Brown videos, and made as an entry for SoME1: https://

From playlist Summer of Math Exposition Youtube Videos

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If life gives you a lemon billiard, use it to make lemonade!

This billiard is made of two intersecting circular arcs, and can be seen as a stadium with straight parts of negative length. It is a billiard of so-called mixed type, as it features both regular and chaotic trajectories. There is a periodic trajectory, bouncing back and forth along the ho

From playlist Billiards in a stadium

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Lyapunov exponent | Exponential decay | Schrödinger equation | Sectional curvature | Dynamical system | Ellipse | Angle of incidence (optics) | Arithmetic billiards | Hamiltonian mechanics | Topological entropy | Hamilton–Jacobi equation | Emil Artin | Surface (mathematics) | Hamiltonian system | Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics) | Ergodicity | Entropy | Integrable system | Sequence | Helmholtz equation | Ergodic theory | Riemann surface | Geodesic | Chaos theory | Mixing (mathematics) | Illumination problem | Non-Euclidean geometry | Fermi–Ulam model | Glossary of Riemannian and metric geometry | Instability | Quantum chaos | Manifold | Poincaré map | Metric tensor | Curvature | Stadium (geometry) | Jacques Hadamard | Second law of thermodynamics | Convex set | Bernoulli scheme