Poincaré last theorem
Let be an annulus in the plane bounded by circles with radii and and let a mapping from this domain onto itself ( is the polar angle), given by
satisfy the conditions: 1) the mapping preserves area; 2) each boundary circle maps onto itself,
and 3) the points with move counter-clockwise and the points with clockwise, that is, , . Then this mapping has two fixed points. More generally, instead of preserving area one can require that no subdomain maps to a proper subset of itself.
This theorem was stated by H. Poincaré [1] in 1912 in connection with certain problems of celestial mechanics; it was proved by him in a series of particular cases but he did not, however, obtain a general proof of this theorem. The paper was sent by Poincaré to an Italian journal (see [1]) two weeks before his death, and the author expressed his conviction, in an accompanying letter to the editor, of the validity of the theorem in the general case.
References
[1] | H. Poincaré, "Sur un théorème de géometrie" Rend. Circ. Mat. Palermo , 33 (1912) pp. 375–407 |
[2] | G. Birkhoff, "Proof of Poincaré's geometric theorem" Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. , 14 (1913) pp. 14–22 |
[3] | L.A. Pars, "A treatise on analytical dynamics" , Heinemann , London (1965) |
Comments
A proof of Poincaré's last theorem is in [2]. It is also known as the Poincaré–Birkhoff fixed-point theorem.
References
[a1] | V.I. Arnol'd, A. Avez, "Problèmes ergodiques de la mécanique classique" , Gauthier-Villars (1967) pp. §20.5; Append. 29 (Translated from Russian) |
[a2] | G.D. Birkhoff, "Dynamical systems" , Amer. Math. Soc. (1927) |
Poincaré last theorem. Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Poincar%C3%A9_last_theorem&oldid=17810