Geometric approach to Hamiltonian dynamics and statistical mechanics
Lapo Casetti (1), Marco Pettini (2), E. G. D. Cohen (3) ((1) INFM,, Dipartimento di Fisica, Politecnico di Torino, Italy, (2) Osservatorio, Astrofisico di Arcetri, Firenze, Italy, (3) The Rockefeller University, New, York, USA)

TL;DR
This paper reviews how differential geometry and topology can be applied to understand chaos and phase transitions in Hamiltonian systems, revealing new geometric and topological insights into their dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a geometric theory of chaos considering curvature fluctuations and proposes a topological hypothesis linking phase transitions to topological changes in configuration space.
Findings
Chaos can be induced by positive curvature fluctuations.
Analytical estimates of Lyapunov exponents are possible via geometric models.
Phase transitions correlate with topological changes in configuration space.
Abstract
This paper is a review of results which have been recently obtained by applying mathematical concepts drawn, in particular, from differential geometry and topology, to the physics of Hamiltonian dynamical systems with many degrees of freedom of interest for statistical mechanics. The first part of the paper concerns the applications of methods used in classical differential geometry to study the chaotic dynamics of Hamiltonian systems. Starting from the identity between the trajectories of a dynamical system and the geodesics in its configuration space, a geometric theory of chaotic dynamics can be developed, which sheds new light on the origin of chaos in Hamiltonian systems. In fact, it appears that chaos can be induced not only by negative curvatures, as was originally surmised, but also by positive curvatures, provided the curvatures are fluctuating along the geodesics. In the case…
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