Arc length paramatrizations satisfy original system of differential equations? Say we have a system

Aedan Gonzales

Aedan Gonzales

Answered question

2022-04-12

Arc length paramatrizations satisfy original system of differential equations?
Say we have a system of differential equations
{ x ( t ) + f ( t ) x ( t ) = 0 y ( t ) + f ( t ) y ( t ) = 0
on an interval [ a , b ], along with the restriction that
x ( t ) 2 + y ( t ) 2 = 1
on [ a , b ].
Now, Euler proved that as long as x ( t ) , y ( t ) are continuous and not both zero at a point, then we can re-parametrize x , y to some functions x ~ , y ~ which have the same image as x , y but are arc-length parametrized.
Now, say we have a solution ( x ( t ) , y ( t ) ) to
{ x ( t ) + f ( t ) x ( t ) = 0 y ( t ) + f ( t ) y ( t ) = 0
that satisfies the hypotheses needed to apply the previously mentioned re-parametrization. Say ( x ~ ( t ) , y ~ ( t ) ) are this re-parametrization, so they have the same image of ( x ( t ) , y ( t ) ) on [ a , b ] and satisfy
x ( t ) 2 + y ( t ) 2 = 1.
Is it still the case that
{ ( x ~ ) ( t ) + f ( t ) ( x ~ ) ( t ) = 0 ( y ~ ) ( t ) + f ( t ) ( y ~ ) ( t ) = 0 ?

Answer & Explanation

Kharroubip9ej0

Kharroubip9ej0

Beginner2022-04-13Added 10 answers

Solutions of that system cannot be reparametrized to have ( x ) 2 + ( y ) 2 constant for nonconstant f ( t ). Reparametrization alters the velocity vector but here x , y v are the "spatial" coordinates and x , y the velocities. For variable positive f ( t ) the solution curves cut across the solutions with f = c for different c, and all of the latter are circles (for c > 0).
If you did reparametrize to have x 2 + y 2 constant, there would be no reason for it to satisfy the same system of differential equations, but ( x ( t ) , y ( t ) ) would follow the same curves.

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