An introduction to the Kepler-Heisenberg problem

01/10/2021
by   Corey Shanbrom, et al.
0

Here we provide an overview of what is known, and what is not known, about an interesting dynamical system known as the Kepler-Heisenberg problem. The main idea is to pose a version of the classical Kepler problem of planetary motion, but in a sub-Riemannian setting. The result is system which is surprisingly rich and beautiful, mysterious in some ways but tame in others, offering a substantial number of questions which seem non-trivial yet tractable.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
01/12/2017

Functional Decomposition using Principal Subfields

Let f∈ K(t) be a univariate rational function. It is well known that any...
research
12/05/2017

A Short Note on Undirected Fitch Graphs

The symmetric version of Fitch's xenology relation coincides with class ...
research
12/28/2019

Self-similarity in the Kepler-Heisenberg problem

The Kepler-Heisenberg problem is that of determining the motion of a pla...
research
10/15/2020

Solving Trust Region Subproblems Using Riemannian Optimization

The Trust Region Subproblem is a fundamental optimization problem that t...
research
05/08/2018

A Simple and Efficient Strategy for the Coin Weighing Problem with a Spring Scale

This paper considers a generalized version of the coin weighing problem ...
research
04/21/2020

Dynamic Maintanance of Low-Stretch Probabilistic Tree Embeddings with Applications

We give the first non-trivial fully dynamic probabilistic tree embedding...
research
06/13/2020

ω-categorical structures avoiding height 1 identities

The algebraic dichotomy conjecture for Constraint Satisfaction Problems ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset