Variational principle in canonical variables, Weber transformation and complete set of the local integrals of motion for dissipation-free magnetohydrodynamics
A. V. Kats
Usikov Institute for Radiophysics and Electronics National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, 61085 Kharkiv, Ukraine
PACS: 04.20.Fy, 47.10.+g
Abstract
The intriguing problem of the "missing" MHD integrals of motion
is solved in the paper, i.e., analogs of the Ertel, helicity and vorticity
invariants are obtained. The two latter were discussed earlier in the
literature only for the specific cases, and Ertel invariant is first
presented. The set of ideal MHD invariants obtained appears to be complete:
to each hydrodynamic invariant corresponds its MHD generalization. These
additional invariants are found by means of the fluid velocity decomposition
based on its representation in terms of generalized potentials. This
representation follows from the discussed variational principle in
Hamiltonian (canonical) variables and it naturally decomposes the velocity field into the sum of
"hydrodynamic" and "magnetic" parts. The "missing" local invariants
are expressed in terms of the "hydrodynamic" part of the velocity and
therefore depend on the (non-unique) velocity decomposition, i.e., they are
gauge-dependent. Nevertheless, the corresponding conserved integral
quantities can be made decomposition-independent by the appropriate choosing
of the initial conditions for the generalized potentials. It is also shown
that the Weber transformation of MHD equations (partially integration of the
MHD equations) leads to the velocity representation coinciding with that
following from the variational principle with constraints. The necessity of
exploiting the complete form of the velocity representation in order to deal
with general-type MHD flows (non-barotropic, rotational and with all
possible types of breaks as well) in terms of single-valued potentials is
also under discussion.
The new basic invariants found allows one to widen the set of the local
invariants on the basis of the well-known recursion procedure.