Conservation laws derived by the Neutral-Action Method |
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Authors: | U. Nordbrock R. Kienzler |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Production Engineering, University of Bremen, P.O. Box 330, IW3-FB4, 28334 Bremen, Germany |
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Abstract: | Conservation laws are a recognized tool in physical- and engineering sciences. The classical procedure to construct conservation laws is to apply Noether's Theorem. It requires the existence of a Lagrange-function for the system under consideration. Two unknown sets of functions have to be found. A broader class of such laws is obtainable, if Noether's Theorem is used together with the Bessel-Hagen extension, raising the number of sets of unknown functions to three. By using the recently developed Neutral-Action Method, the same conservation laws can be obtained by calculating only one unknown set of functions. Moreover the Neutral Action Method can also be applied in the absence of a Lagrangian, since only the governing differential equations are required for this procedure. In the paper, an application of this method to the Schr?dinger equation is presented. |
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Keywords: | KeywordHeading" >PACS. 11.30.-j Symmetry and conservation laws |
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