Discrete Symmetry and Stability in Hamiltonian Dynamics
Tassos Bountis, George Chechin, Vladimir Sakhnenko

TL;DR
This paper explores the existence, construction, and stability of periodic and quasiperiodic orbits in Hamiltonian systems, emphasizing the role of discrete symmetries and nonlinear normal modes, with applications to the Fermi Pasta Ulam chain.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive framework combining group theory and numerical methods to analyze stability of NNMs and q-tori in Hamiltonian systems, including the novel GALIk approach.
Findings
Stability of low-dimensional manifolds explains FPU recurrences.
Symmetry-based methods simplify the study of orbit destabilization.
GALIk method accurately predicts energy equipartition onset.
Abstract
In this tutorial we address the existence and stability of periodic and quasiperiodic orbits in N degree of freedom Hamiltonian systems and their connection with discrete symmetries. Of primary importance in our study are the nonlinear normal modes (NNMs), i.e periodic solutions which represent continuations of the system's linear normal modes in the nonlinear regime. We examine the existence of such solutions and discuss different methods for constructing them and studying their stability under fixed and periodic boundary conditions. In the periodic case, we employ group theoretical concepts to identify a special type of NNMs called one-dimensional "bushes". We describe how to use linear combinations such NNMs to construct s(>1)-dimensional bushes of quasiperiodic orbits, for a wide variety of Hamiltonian systems and exploit the symmetries of the linearized equations to simplify the…
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