- Series
- School of Mathematics Colloquium
- Time
- Thursday, September 17, 2015 - 11:00am for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 006
- Speaker
- Dr. Jinxin Xue – University of Chicago – jxue@math.uchicago.edu – http://math.uchicago.edu/~jxue/
- Organizer
- Molei Tao
Though the modern analytic celestial mechanics has been existing for more
than 300 years since Newton, there are still many basic questions
unanswered, for instance, there is still no rigorous mathematical proof
explaining why our solar system has been stable for such a long time (five
billion years) hence no guarantee that it would remain stable for the next
five billion years. Instead, it is known that there are various instability
behaviors in the Newtonian N-body problem.
In this talk, we mention three types instability behaviors in Newtonian
N-body problem. The first type we will talk about is simply chaotic
motions, which include for instance the oscillatory motions, in which case,
one body travels back and forth between neighborhoods of zero and infinity.
The second type is “organized” chaotic motions, also known as Arnold
diffusion or weak turbulence. Finally, we will talk about our work on the
existence of the most wild unstable behavior, non collision singularities,
also called finite time blow up solution.
The talk is mostly expository. Zero background on celestial mechanism or
dynamical systems is needed to follow the lecture.