Abstract
We consider the classical three-body system with [Formula: see text] degrees of freedom [Formula: see text] at zero total angular momentum. The study is restricted to potentials [Formula: see text] that depend solely on relative (mutual) distances [Formula: see text] between bodies. Following the proposal by J. L. Lagrange, in the center-of-mass frame we introduce the relative distances (complemented by angles) as generalized coordinates and show that the kinetic energy does not depend on [Formula: see text], confirming results by Murnaghan (1936) at [Formula: see text] and van Kampen–Wintner (1937) at [Formula: see text], where it corresponds to a 3D solid body. Realizing [Formula: see text]-symmetry [Formula: see text], we introduce new variables [Formula: see text], which allows us to make the tensor of inertia nonsingular for binary collisions. In these variables the kinetic energy is a polynomial function in the [Formula: see text]-phase space. The three-body positions form a triangle (of interaction) and the kinetic energy is [Formula: see text]-permutationally invariant with respect to interchange of body positions and masses (as well as with respect to interchange of edges of the triangle and masses). For equal masses, we use lowest order symmetric polynomial invariants of [Formula: see text] to define new generalized coordinates, they are called the geometrical variables. Two of them of the lowest order (sum of squares of sides of triangle and square of the area) are called volume variables. It is shown that for potentials which depend on geometrical variables only (i) and those which depend on mass-dependent volume variables alone (ii), the Hamilton’s equations of motion can be considered as being relatively simple. We study three examples in some detail: (I) three-body Newton gravity in [Formula: see text], (II) three-body choreography in [Formula: see text] on the algebraic lemniscate by Fujiwara et al., where the problem becomes one-dimensional in the geometrical variables and (III) the (an)harmonic oscillator.
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