Archive for March, 2008

Indirect utility function; utility;

Monday, March 17th, 2008

In economics, a consumer’s indirect utility function
<math>v(p, w)</math> gives the consumer’s maximal utility when faced with a price level <math>p</math> and an amount of income <math>w</math>. It represents the consumer’s preferences over market conditions.

This function is called indirect because consumers usually think about their preferences in terms of what they consume rather than prices. A consumer’s indirect utility <math>v(p, w)</math> can be computed from its utility function <math>u(x)</math> by first computing the most preferred bundle <math>x(p, w)</math> by solving the utility maximization problem; and second, computing the utility <math>u(x(p, w))</math> the consumer derives from that bundle. The indirect utility function for consumers is analogous to the profit function for firms.

Formally, the indirect utility function is:

  • Non-increasing in prices, because an increase in prices cannot open up an available bundle that would provide more utility;
  • Non-decreasing in income, because when income rises, at worst you could consume the same bundle;
  • Homogenous with degree zero in prices and income; if prices and income are all multiplied by a given constant the same bundle of consumption represents a maximum, so optimal utility does not change.

Microgram; mistaken for

Monday, March 17th, 2008

In the metric system, a microgram is 1/1,000,000 of a gram (1 x 106), or 1/1000 of a milligram, is one of the smallest units of weight/mass commonly used. The abbreviation μg is often used in scientific literature, but JCAHO recommends that hospitals do not use this abbreviation in handwritten orders due to the risk that the mu could be mistaken for an m, resulting in a thousandfold overdose. The abbreviation mcg is recommended instead.http://www.aapmr.org/hpl/pracguide/jcahosymbols.htm


See Also

  • SI units

in the metric system, a microgram is 1/1,000,000 of a gram (1 x 10-6), or 1/1000 of a milligram, is one of the smallest units of weight/mass commonly used. The abbreviation μg is often used in scientific literature, but JCAHO recommends that hospitals do not use this abbreviation in handwritten orders due to the risk that the mu could be mistaken for an m, resulting in a thousandfold overdose. The abbreviation mcg is recommended instead.[1]


Notes

A microgram is also 0.000001 of a gram.

Faggot (unit of measurement); bundle

Monday, March 17th, 2008
For other uses of the term, see faggot

A faggot is an archaic English unit applied to various-sized collections of sticks:

1 short faggot of sticks = 2 ft girth

Public Utilities Commission of Ohio; of utilities or rather

Monday, March 17th, 2008

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) is an agency of Federal State of Ohio that is charged with the regulation of utility service providers such as those of electricity, natural gas, and telecommunications as well as railroad safety and intrastate hazardous materials transport. There are several ways by which the Commission attempts to do as such [1]:

  • Enforcement of laws against service deemed unfair or unsafe
  • Resolving disputes between utilities and residential, business, and industrial customers, as well as between competing utilities.
  • Assuring availability of residential, business, and industrial utility services
  • Providing consumers with relevant information about their rights and responsibilities
  • Regulating rates for utility services in which there is little to no competition (i.e. electricity and natural gas services)

There are five commissioners (one of whom serves as chairman) as well as approximately 400 agency employees. Each commissioner is appointed by the residing governor to a five-year term. Current commissioners are:

  • Alan R. Schriber (chair), through April 2009
  • Ronda Hartman Fergus, through April 2010
  • Judy A. Jones, through April 2007
  • Valerie A. Lemmie, through April 2011
  • Donald L. Mason, through April 2008


External links

  • Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO)
  • PUCO Commissioners
  • Apples to Apples Natural Gas and Electric Rate Comparison Charts
  • File an informal complaint with the PUCO
  • File a formal complaint with the PUCO
  • Ohio Utility Maps
  • Utility Information by Street Address

Indirect finance; consumer’s indirect

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

Indirect finance is where borrowers borrow funds from the financial market through indirect means, such as through a financial intermediary. This is different from direct financing where there is a direct connection to the financial markets as indicated by the borrower issuing securities directly on the market. Common methods for direct financing include a financial auction (where price of the security is bid upon) or an initial public offering (where the security is sold for a set initial price).

Indirect Financing:

Rather than collecting tax revenue and redistributing that revenue, the government doesn’t collect. For example, reduced tax burdens on financiers provides focused monetary benefits and effectively lowers bond prices. This could be applied in a number of applications from infrastructural investment to education or military spending.

Methodenstreit; maximization

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

Methodenstreit is a German term (lit. ’strife over methods’) referring to an intellectual controversy or debate over epistemology, research methodology, or the way in which academic inquiry is framed or pursued. More specifically, it also refers to a particular controversy over the method and epistemological character of economics carried on in the late 1880s and early 1890s between the supporters of the Austrian School of Economics, led by Carl Menger, and the proponents of the (German) Historical School, led by Gustav von Schmoller. To distinguish it from other similar disputes, German speakers sometimes specify it as the Methodenstreit der Nationalökonomie (Methodenstreit of economics), but outside of German speaking countries, the Germanism Methodenstreit mostly refers to this one.

On an intellectual level the Methodenstreit was a question of whether there could be a science, apart from history, which could explain the dynamics of human action. Politically there were overtones of a conflict between the classical liberalism of the Austrian School and the welfare state advocated by the Historical School.

Contents


History


Background

The Historical School contended that economists could develop new and better social laws from the collection and study of statistics and historical materials, and distrusted theories not derived from historical experience. Thus, the German Historical School focused on specific dynamic institutions as the largest variable in changes in political economy. The Historical School were themselves reacting against materialist determinism, the idea that human action could, and would (once science advanced enough), be explained as physical and chemical reactions.Mises, Ludwig von: “The Historical Setting of the Austrian School of Economics”

The Austrian School by contrast believed that economics was the work of philosophical logic and could only ever be about developing rules from first principles — seeing human motives and social interaction as far too complex to be amenable to statistical analysis — and purporting their theories of human action to be universally valid.


Menger and the German Historical School

The first move was when Carl Menger attacked Schmoller and the German Historical School. Menger thought the best method of studying economics was through reason and finding general theories which applied to broad areas. Menger, as did the Austrians, concentrated upon the subjective, atomistic nature of economics. He emphasized the subjective factors. He said the grounds for economics were built upon self-interest, utility maximization, and complete knowledge. He said aggregative, collective ideas could not have adequate foundation unless they rested upon individual components.

Schmoller responded with an unfavourable review of Menger’s book.


Consequences

The term “Austrian school of economics” came into existence as a result of the Methodenstreit, when Schmoller used it in an unfavourable review of one of Menger’s later books, intending to convey an impression of backwardness and obscurantism of Habsburg Austria compared to the more modern Prussians.


Related rivalry

Another famous — and somewhat related — Methodenstreit in the 1890s pitted the German social and economic historian Karl Lamprecht against several prominent political historians, particularly Friedrich Meinecke, over Lamprecht’s use of social scientific and psychological methods in his research. The dispute resulted in Lamprecht and his work being widely discredited among academic German historians. As a consequence, German historians pursued more political and ideological historical questions, while Lamprecht’s style of interdisciplinary history was largely abandoned. Lamprecht’s work remained influential elsewhere, however, particularly in the tradition of the French Annales School.


See also

  • Economic methodology
  • Unreasonable ineffectiveness of mathematics
  • Philosophy of mathematics
  • Philosophy of science
  • Positive economics


References


External links

  • Epistemological Problems of Economics by Ludwig von Mises
  • The Historical Setting of the Austrian School of Economics by Ludwig von Mises

WinDiff; utilities are future-regarding and

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

WinDiff is a graphical file comparison program published by Microsoft, and is distributed with certain versions of Microsoft Visual Studio as well as by source with the Platform SDK code samples.


See also

  • Comparison of file comparison tools


External links

Standalone downloads:

  • Keith Devens
  • Grig Software

Other links:

  • Official site for XP SP2 Support Tools - contains WinDiff and other utilities.
  • Source code at Grig Software
  • RunWinDiff - a front-end to WinDiff designed to make file selection easier.
  • WinDiff usage instructions

Hercules’ Club; is called

Friday, March 14th, 2008

Hercules’ Club may refer to:

Plants

  • Aralia spinosa (also called angelica tree, devil’s walking stick, prickly ash)
  • Zanthoxylum clava-herculis (also called pepperwood, Southern prickly ash)

Rock formation

  • Hercules’ Club or Hercules’ Bludgeon, a 25-meter-high limestone column at Ojców National Park, Poland.

Bachmann’s bundle; bundle that would

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

Bachmann’s bundle is one of the four conduction tracts that make up the atrial conduction system of the heart which is responsible for transmitting the pacemaking impulses of the sinoatrial node to the rest of the heart. Bachmann’s bundle originates in the sinoatrial node and is the only tract that innervates the left atrium.


Bachmann’s bundle and the atrial conduction system

Besides from Bachmann’s bundle, the other three conduction tracts are known as the anterior, middle, and posterior tracts, which run from the Sinoatrial Node to the atrioventricular node, converging in the region near the coronary sinus. Atrial automaticity foci are within the atrial conduction system. The concentration of converging conduction tracts near the coronary sinus results in considerable automaticity activity originating in that area.


See also

  • Electrical conduction system of the heart
  • Bundle of His

Utility bicycle; utility when

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

A utility bicycle (aka city bicycle or a beater) is one which is designed for a practical purpose, as opposed to “sport bicycles” which are designed for recreation and competition, such as touring bicycles, racing bicycles and mountain bicycles.

Utility bicycles are used for short-distance commuting, for running errands, shopping and sometimes promotion. They have been used for courier service in wars and to get around such large workplaces as large factories, warehouses, airports and movie studio lots. Utility bicycles often feature a step-through frame so they can be easily mounted, hub gears and drum brakes to reduce the need for maintenance, mudguards to keep the rider’s clothing clean, a chain guard to prevent skirts or loose trousers from being caught in the chain, a skirt guard to prevent a long skirt catching in the rear brakes, a kickstand so it can be parked anywhere, and a basket or pannier rack to carry personal possessions or shopping bags. Utility bicycles typically are heavier than “sport bicycles”, parts such as rims/wheels are chosen for strength and durability and low cost rather than high performance. The handlebars are almost always curved back, and higher than the saddle so that the rider can ride in an upright riding position. Some people add a child seat or a trailer.

These parts and features mean a good utility bike is functional, durable, comfortable and versatile. These virtues come at the expense of high weight.

The utility bicycle is the most widely used form of bicycle in many parts of the world, but in many industrialized nations motor vehicles have replaced bicycles for personal transport in the 20th century and the reduced availability of utility bicycles in some countries has led people to adopt sport bicycles for tasks for which utility bicycles are better suited. A few countries, notably the Netherlands and Denmark, are exceptions to this rule. In addition, the Deutsche Post uses utility bikes in most German cities for delivering mail.


See also

  • Bicycle messenger
  • Roadster (bicycle)

Adams operation; same bundle

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

In mathematics, an Adams operation

ψk

is a cohomology operation in topological K-theory, or any allied operation in algebraic K-theory or other types of algebraic construction, defined on a pattern introduced by Frank Adams. The basic idea is to implement some fundamental identities in symmetric function theory, at the level of vector bundles or other representing object in more abstract theories. Here k ≥ 0 is a given integer.

The fundamental idea is that for a vector bundle V on a topological space X, we should have

ψk(V) is to Λk(V)

as

the power sum Σ αk is to the k-th elementary symmetric function σk

of the roots α of a polynomial P(t). (Cf. Newton’s identities.) Here Λk denotes the k-th exterior power. From classical algebra it is known that the power sums are certain integral polynomials Qk in the σk. The idea is to apply the same polynomials to the Λk(V), taking the place of σk. This calculation can be defined in a K-group, in which vector bundles may be formally combined by addition, subtraction and multiplication (tensor product). The polynomials here are called Newton polynomials (not, however, the Newton polynomials of interpolation theory).

Justification of the expected properties comes from the line bundle case, where V is a Whitney sum of line bundles. For that case treating the line bundle direct factors formally as roots is something rather standard in algebraic topology (cf. the Leray-Hirsch theorem). In general a mechanism for reducing to that case comes from the splitting principle for vector bundles.


References

  • Adams, J.F. Vector Fields on Spheres, The Annals of Mathematics, 2nd Ser., Vol. 75, No. 3 (May, 1962), pp. 603-632

Felicific calculus; Bentham to distinguish between

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

The felicific calculus is an algorithm formulated by utilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham for calculating the degree or amount of pleasure that a specific action is likely to cause. Bentham, an ethical hedonist, believed the moral rightness or wrongness of an action to be a function of the amount of pleasure or pain that it produced. Thus, the felicific calculus could, in principle at least, determine the moral status of any considered act. The algorithm is also known as the Utility calculus, the Hedonistic calculus and the Hedonic calculus.

Variables, or vectors of the pleasures and pains included in this calculation—which Bentham called “elements” or “dimensions“—were:

  1. Intensity: How strong is the pleasure?
  2. Duration: How long will the pleasure last?
  3. Certainty or Uncertainty: How likely or unlikely is it that the pleasure will occur?
  4. Propinquity or Remoteness: How soon will the pleasure occur?
  5. Fecundity: The probability that the action will be followed by sensations of the same kind.
  6. Purity: The probability it will be followed by sensations of the opposite kind.

To these six, which consider the pleasures and pains within the life of a person, Bentham added a seventh element:

7. Extent: How many people will be affected?


Bentham’s Instructions

  • Begin with any one person of those whose interests seem most immediately to be affected by it: and take an account,

    • Of the value of each distinguishable pleasure which appears to be produced by it in the first instance.
    • Of the value of each pain which appears to be produced by it in the first instance.
    • Of the value of each pleasure which appears to be produced by it after the first. This constitutes the fecundity of the first pleasure and the impurity of the first pain.
    • Of the value of each pain which appears to be produced by it after the first. This constitutes the fecundity of the first pain, and the impurity of the first pleasure.
  • Sum up all the values of all the pleasures on the one side, and those of all the pains on the other. The balance, if it be on the side of pleasure, will give the good tendency of the act upon the whole, with respect to the interests of that individual person; if on the side of pain, the bad tendency of it upon the whole.
  • Take an account of the number of persons whose interests appear to be concerned; and repeat the above process with respect to each. Sum up the numbers expressive of the degrees of good tendency, which the act has, with respect to each individual, in regard to whom the tendency of it is good upon the whole. Do this again with respect to each individual, in regard to whom the tendency of it is bad upon the whole. Take the balance which if on the side of pleasure, will give the general good tendency of the act, with respect to the total number or community of individuals concerned; if on the side of pain, the general evil tendency, with respect to the same community.

To make his proposal easier to remember, Bentham devised what he called a “mnemonic doggerel” (also referred to as “memoriter verses”), which synthesized “the whole fabric of morals and legislation”:

Intense, long, certain, speedy, fruitful, pure—
Such marks in pleasures and in pains endure.
Such pleasures seek if private be thy end:
If it be public, wide let them extend
Such pains avoid, whichever be thy view:
If pains must come, let them extend to few.


Example Usage

Let us imagine you are a doctor driving to a patient, a young mother who is about to give birth. It looks like she will need a Caesarian section. It is late at night and you come across a car accident on the country road you are travelling on. Two cars are involved in the accident and both drivers are unconscious and have visible injuries. One of the men is the father of the child you are going to deliver, and the other man is very old. You do not know the extent of their injuries but in your opinion, without immediate medical help, one or both may die. You as a Utilitarian are now faced with one of three possible solutions:

  1. You help the young mother who’s about to give birth.
  2. You help the young woman’s husband.
  3. You help the old man.

The outcome of felicific calculus would suggest:

  1. Attending to the mother first is your primary concern as the doctor. The death of both mother and child is almost a certainty if you do not act now, whereas the death of the men is uncertain. Furthermore, the pain of the mother is clearly greater than that of the men at this time. There is a greater richness and purity in saving the life of a young child who has, in all probability, a long happy life ahead. Therefore the extent and duration of the utility created by these two people is a clear likelihood.
  2. Attending to the young husband is the next priority. The pleasures of a new family—its intensity, duration, extent, richness, and purity—are all clear probabilities. If, as the doctor, you attend him first his wife and child would in all probability die. The man would then experience pain. The pain experienced by the widowed husband is likely to outstrip any pleasure to be gained from continued life without his loved ones.
  3. Attending to the old man is the last priority. The duration and certainty of his future pleasure are questionable owing to his age—he has all but lived his life. This is sometimes known as the ‘good innings’ argument, according to which the older you are the less claim you have to life.

Certainly, the doctor should not be limited to the three choices. To maximize the felicific calculus, he should try to secure external help by calling another doctor to help the mother, and by asking people nearby and the emergency services to deal with the accident.

Some critics argue that the happiness of different people is incommensurable, and thus a felicific calculus is impossible in practice.


References

  • Jeremy Bentham, An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, London, 1789, chap. 4

Turkey Trot; could consume

Monday, March 10th, 2008

A Turkey Trot is an American Thanksgiving tradition. A turkey trot is a fun run or race that is held on or around Thanksgiving Day. All across the United States, Americans anticipate indulgent Thanksgiving feasts and run in turkey trots to burn off calories before the big meal. However, it is unlikely that most will expend more calories than they consume during a traditional Thanksgiving meal.

In many parts of the United States, Turkey Trots are associated with Thanksgiving tradition as much as the meal itself. Many courses may be just one mile in distance, while others may be full marathons, as is the Atlanta Marathon, which is held on Thanksgiving Day. Some organizations hold their Turkey Trots the week prior to Thanksgiving in order to provide festive holiday meals to homeless and low-income families in their community. Turkey trots range in size from just a few dozen runners to tens of thousands.


Buffalo, NY Turkey Trot

Established in 1876, the Buffalo, NY Turkey Trot race is the oldest continually running footrace in North America. The race on Thursday, November 22, 2007, marked the 112th consecutive start (older than the Boston Marathon)

Charged particle; proportion

Monday, March 10th, 2008

In

physics, a charged particle is a particle with an electric charge. It may be either a subatomic particle or an ion. A collection of charged particles, or even a gas containing a proportion of charged particles, is called a plasma, which is called the fourth state of matter because its properties are quite different from solids, liquids and gases (plasma is the most common state of Matter in the universe). Particles either have a positive, negative or no charge (being neutral).

Their effects go beyond the laboratory though: see aurora borealis

Inverse demand function; profit function

Monday, March 10th, 2008

In economics, an inverse demand function is a function that maps the quantity of output supplied to the market price (dependent variable) for that output.

In mathematical terms, if the demand function is f(x), then the inverse demand function is f -1(x). This is to say that the inverse demand function is the demand function with the axes switched.

Magnetic pole; analogous

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Magnetic pole may refer to the pole of a magnet. It may also refer to:

  • Magnetic North Pole, the shifting point on the Earth to which the “north” end of a dipole magnet points
  • Magnetic South Pole, the shifting point on the Earth to which the “south” end of a dipole magnet points
  • An analogous location on another astronomical body; see Poles of astronomical bodies.

Network Utility; sources of utility for

Saturday, March 8th, 2008

Network Utility is an application included with Mac OS X that provides a variety of computer network information. It is located at /Applications/Utilities/Network Utility.app.


Services

  • Network interfaces
  • Netstat
  • AppleTalk
  • ping
  • Lookup
  • Traceroute
  • Whois
  • Finger
  • Port scan


Port scan

Network Utility uses the tools supplied in the unix directories for most of its functions, however for the port scan it uses a unix executable in its resources folder, stroke, found at /Applications/Utilities/Network Utility.app/Contents/Resources/stroke.


Gallery

NHS Hospital Trust; would provide more

Friday, March 7th, 2008

NHS Hospital Trusts provide acute health services within the English and Welsh National Health Service. They are commissioned to provide these services by Primary Care Trusts.

Acute Trusts adjudged to be performing with outstanding efficiency may be reclassified as Foundation Trusts. These trusts are given greater independence from the Primary Care Trusts over salaries, bonuses and management. There are around 60 in the United Kingdom (i.e. Sheffield Children’s Hospital).

For a list of Trusts in Wales, see List of Hospitals in Wales.

See also:

  • National Health Service
  • NHS Trust
  • Strategic Health Authorities

Nuevo peso; identical

Friday, March 7th, 2008

The nuevo peso (new peso) was the result of hyperinflation in Mexico. In 1993, Carlos Salinas de Gortari had to strip 3 zeros from the peso. The parity was $1000 = N$1.

The transition was done in three years from January 1, 1993 to January 1 1996, when the word “nuevo” was removed from the currency, returning it to be called “peso”. The parity that followed was N$1 = $1.

Confusion was avoided by making the “nuevo peso” currency almost identical to the old “peso”. Both of them circulated at the same time. Later all currency that only said “peso” was removed from circulation. The Banco de México (Bank of Mexico) then issued new currency with new graphics, also under the “nuevo peso”. These was followed by the current almost identical “peso” currency.

Surface bundle over the circle; bundle

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

In mathematics, a surface bundle over the circle is a fiber bundle with base space a circle, and with fiber space a surface. Therefore the total space has dimension 2 + 1 = 3.
A 3-manifold homeomorphic to a surface bundle is often called fibered.
In general, fiber bundles over the circle are a special case of mapping tori.

Here is the construction: take the Cartesian product of a surface with the unit interval. Glue the two copies of the surface, on the boundary, by some homeomorphism. This homeomorphism is called the monodromy of the surface bundle. It is possible to show that the homeomorphism type of the bundle obtained depends only on the conjugacy class, in the mapping class group, of the gluing homeomorphism chosen.

This construction is an important source of examples both in the field of low-dimensional topology as well as in geometric group theory. In the former we find that the geometry of the three-manifold is determined by the dynamics of the homeomorphism. This is the fibered part of Thurston’s geometrization theorem for Haken manifolds, whose proof requires the Nielsen-Thurston classification for surface homeomorphisms as well as deep results in the theory of Kleinian groups. In geometric group theory the fundamental groups of such bundles give an important class of HNN-extensions: that is, extensions of the fundamental group of the fiber (a surface) by the integers.

A simple special case of this construction (considered in Poincaré’s foundational paper) is that of a torus bundle.


See also

  • Virtually fibered conjecture

Queen’s Personal Australian Flag; represents

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

The Queen’s Personal Australian Flag, sometimes known as the Royal Standard of Australia is the personal flag of Queen Elizabeth II in her role as Queen of Australia. The flag was approved for use in 1962. It is only used by the Queen when she is in Australia, or attending an event abroad in her role as head of state of Australia. The Queen’s representative, the Governor-General of Australia has their own flag.

The flag consists of a banner of the coat of arms of Australia, defaced with a gold seven-pointed star with a blue disc containing the letter E below a crown, surrounded by a garland of golden roses.

The six sections of the flag taken from the coat of arms each represents the arms of the Australian states. The first sixth represents New South Wales and bears a red St George’s Cross, upon which is a gold lion in the centre and a gold star on each arm. The second sixth represents Victoria and contains a Crown and five white stars on a blue field. The third sixth represents Queensland and consists of a blue Maltese cross, bearing a Crown, on a white field. The fourth sixth represents South Australia and includes a Piping Shrike on a gold field. The fifth sixth represents Western Australia and consists of a black swan on a gold field. The last sixth represents Tasmania and contains a red lion on a white field.

The gold seven-pointed star, represents the states and the territories. The blue disc is taken from the Queen’s Personal Flag as used for duties within the Commonwealth of Nations.

The flag can be used in two ratios, 1:2 and 22:31. The 1:2 ratio ensures the flag maintains visual integrity with other naval flags, which are 1:2. A 22:31 ratio gives simple dimensions for the flag elements, with a border of 2 units thick, and central squares of dimensions 9×9.


References

  • Barraclough, E. M. C. and Crampton, W. G. (1978). Flags of the World. London: Frederick Warne. ISBN 0-7232-2015-8. P. 207


External links

  • Queen Elizabeth II’s Personal Standard in Australia at Flags of the World. Accessed 8 Feb 06.


See also

  • Royal Standard- for a full list of all of Queen Elizabeth II’s flags
  • List of Australian flags

Canonical coordinates; bundle

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

In mathematics and classical mechanics, canonical coordinates are a particular set of coordinates on the phase space, or equivalently, on the cotangent manifold of a manifold. Canonical coordinates arise naturally in physics in the study of Hamiltonian mechanics. As Hamiltonian mechanics is generalized by symplectic geometry and canonical transformations are generalized by contact transformations, so the 19th century definition of canonical coordinates in classical mechanics may be generalized to a more abstract 20th century definition in terms of cotangent bundles.

This article defines the canonical coordinates as they appear in classical mechanics. A closely related concept also appears in quantum mechanics; see the Stone-von Neumann theorem and canonical commutation relations for details.

Contents


Definition, in classical mechanics

In classical mechanics, canonical coordinates are the coordinates <math>q_i\,</math> and <math>p_i\,</math> in phase space that are used in the Hamiltonian formalism. The canonical coordinates satisfy the fundamental Poisson bracket relations:

<math>\{q_i, q_j\} = 0 \qquad \{p_i, p_j\} = 0 \qquad \{q_i, p_j\} = \delta_{ij}</math>

Canonical coordinates can be obtained from the generalized coordinates of the Lagrangian formalism by a Legendre transformation, or from another set of canonical coordinates by a canonical transformation.


Definition, on cotangent bundles

Canonical coordinates are defined as a special set of coordinates on the cotangent bundle of a manifold. They are usually written as a set of <math>(q^i,p_j)</math> or <math>(x^i,p_j)</math> with the x ’s or q ’s denoting the coordinates on the underlying manifold and the p ’s denoting the conjugate momentum, which are 1-forms in the cotangent bundle at point q in the manifold.

A common definition of canonical coordinates is any set of coordinates on the cotangent bundle that allow the canonical one form to be written in the form

<math>\sum_i p_i\,\mathrm{d}q^i</math>

up to a total differential. A change of coordinates that preserves this form is a canonical transformation; these are a special case of a symplectomorphism, which are essentially a change of coordinates on a symplectic manifold.

In the following exposition, we assume that the manifolds are real manifolds, so that cotangent vectors acting on tangent vectors produce real numbers.


Formal development

Given a manifold Q, a vector field X on Q (or equivalently, a section of the tangent bundle TQ) can be thought of as a function acting on the cotangent bundle, by the duality between the tangent and cotangent spaces. That is, define a function

<math>P_X:T^*Q\to \mathbb{R}</math>

such that

<math>P_X(q,p)=p(X_q)</math>

holds for all cotangent vectors p in <math>T_q^*Q</math>. Here, <math>X_q</math> is a vector in <math>T_qQ</math>, the tangent space to the manifold Q at point q. The function <math>P_X</math> is called the momentum function corresponding to X.

In local coordinates, the vector field X at point q may be written as

<math>X_q=\sum_i X^i(q) \frac{\partial}{\partial q^i}</math>

where the <math>\partial /\partial q^i</math> are the coordinate frame on TQ. The conjugate momentum then has the expression

<math>P_X(q,p)=\sum_i X^i(q) \;p_i</math>

where the <math>p_i</math> are defined as the momentum functions corresponding to the vectors <math>\partial /\partial q^i</math>:

<math>p_i = P_{\partial /\partial q^i}</math>

The <math>q^i</math> together with the <math>p_j</math> together form a coordinate system on the cotangent bundle <math>T^*Q</math>; these coordinates are called the canonical coordinates.


Generalized coordinates

In Lagrangian mechanics, a different set of coordinates are used, called the generalized coordinates. These are commonly denoted as <math>(q^i,\dot{q}^i)</math> with <math>q^i</math> called the generalized position and <math>\dot{q}^i</math> the generalized velocity. When a Hamiltonian is defined on the cotangent bundle, then the generalized coordinates are related to the canonical coordinates by means of the Hamilton–Jacobi equations.


See also

  • symplectic manifold
  • symplectic vector field
  • symplectomorphism

South Central Arkansas Electric Cooperative; of utility for

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

South Central Arkansas Electric Cooperative is a non-profit rural electric utility cooperative headquartered in Arkadelphia, Arkansas. The Cooperative was organized in 1940.

The Cooperative serves portions of eight counties in the state of Arkansas, in a territory generally west and southwest of Arkadelphia.

As of September 2005, the Cooperative had more than 1,770 miles of distribution lines, 9 substations and services 7,300 member accounts.


External links

  • South Central Arkansas Electric Cooperative

Utility infielder; higher proportion of utility

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

A utility infielder is a baseball player, usually someone who does not have a regular starting role on the team, who is capable of playing more than one of the four defensive infield positions: second base, third base, shortstop, and less typically first base. Utility infielders are generally considered excellent defensive players who do not hit well enough to remain in the starting lineup, but can fill in at multiple defensive positions to give the various starters a rest, or replace a starter late in a game to provide improved defense when the team is winning.

Utility infielders include Miguel Cairo of the New York Yankees and Chris Gomez of the Cleveland Indians.