Abstract

The anisotropic Manev problem, which lies at the intersection of classical, quantum, and relativity physics, describes the motion of two point masses in an anisotropic space under the influence of a Newtonian force-law with a relativistic correction term. Using an extension of the Poincaré–Melnikov method, we first prove that for weak anisotropy, chaos shows up on the zero-energy manifold. Then we put into the evidence a class of isolated periodic orbits and show that the system is nonintegrable. Finally, using the geodesic deviation approach, we prove the existence of a large nonchaotic set of uniformly bounded and collisionless solutions.

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