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I'm reading a proof about Lagrangian => Hamiltonian and one part of it just doesn't make sense to me.

The Lagrangian is written $L(q, \dot q, t)$, and is convex in $\dot q$, and then the Hamiltonian is defined via the Legendre transform $$H(p,q,t) = \max_{\dot q} [p \cdot \dot q - L(q, \dot q, t)]$$

Under the right conditions there exists a function $\dot Q (p,q,t)$ such that $$H(p,q,t) = p \cdot \dot Q(p,q,t) - L(q, \dot Q(p,q,t), t)$$ i.e. when some $\dot Q(p,q,t)$ satisfies $$p = \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q}\rvert_{(q, \dot Q(p,q,t), t)} = \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q}(q, \dot Q(p,q,t), t).$$
(Finding this function is usually called "inverting $p$".)

By taking partials in the $p$ variable and using the relationship, we can obtain the relationship $$\dot Q = \frac{\partial H}{\partial p}.$$

Because of the notation I chose, I get the strong urge to say $$\dot q = \frac{\partial H}{\partial p} ,$$ and in fact this is what the textbook does. But have we proved this?

In other words, how can we deduce that $$q'(t) = \frac{\partial H}{\partial p}(p(t), q'(t), t)$$ for any differentiable vector valued function $q$? (or maybe there are more conditions we need on $q$? Here $$p(t) = \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q}(q(t), q'(t), t)$$ according to Lagrange's equations.

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    $\begingroup$ What does your notation $\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot q} (q, \dot Q(p,q,t), t)$ mean? The way it's written it looks like $L$ doesn't depend on $\dot q$, so that partial derivative should be zero. $\endgroup$
    – N. Virgo
    Commented Mar 31, 2014 at 6:55
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    $\begingroup$ Sorry, it means with respect to the second variable. You do the partial with the second variable and then substitute $\dot Q$. I wrote it that way because that's how it's usually written in physics books. $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Mar 31, 2014 at 7:04
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    $\begingroup$ I see, thanks. (I would write it $\left.\frac{\partial L(q,\dot q, t)}{\partial \dot q}\right|_{\dot Q(p,q,t)}$, but then I often find myself notating things differently from the conventions physicists use.) $\endgroup$
    – N. Virgo
    Commented Mar 31, 2014 at 7:29
  • $\begingroup$ It is the other way around, the usual definition is p=∂L\∂q'. Then you can express dq\dt in terms of p and q. $\endgroup$
    – Urgje
    Commented Mar 31, 2014 at 9:18
  • $\begingroup$ Which textbook are you using? I've never seen $p$ defined that way before. It's always defined as $\partial L/\partial\dot{q}$, or some variant thereof, in the texts I've seen. $\endgroup$
    – webb
    Commented Apr 2, 2014 at 17:19

5 Answers 5

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Ok, let us start from scratch. A function $g: \mathbb R^n \to \mathbb R$ with $f \in C^2(\mathbb R^n)$ is said to be convex if its Hessian matrix (i.e. the one with coefficients $\partial^2 f/\partial x_i \partial x_j$) is everywhere (strictly) positive definite.

Let $\Omega \subset \mathbb R \times \mathbb R^n$ be an open set and focus on a jointly $C^2$ Lagrangian function $\Omega \times \mathbb R^n \ni (t,q,\dot{q}) \mapsto L(t, q, \dot{q}) \in \mathbb R$.

For fixed $(t,q) \in \Omega$, $L$ is assumed to be convex as a function of $\dot{q}$. In other words, $\mathbb R^n \ni \dot{q} \mapsto L(t, q, \dot{q}) \in \mathbb R$ is supposed to be convex.

Referring to either systems made of material points or solid bodies, convexity arises from the structure of the kinetic energy part of Lagrangians, which are always of the form $T(t, q, \dot{q}) - V(t, q)$, even considering generalized potentials $V(t,q, \dot{q})$ with linear dependence on $\dot{q}$, as is the case for inertial or electromagnetic forces or inertial forces also in the presence of holonomic ideal constraints.

The associated Hamiltonian function is defined as the Legendre transformation of $L$ with respect to the variables $\dot{q}$. In other words:

$$H(t,q,p) := \max_{\dot{q} \in \mathbb R^n}\left[p\cdot \dot{q} - L(t, q, \dot{q})\right]\tag{1}$$

Within our hypotheses on $L$, from the general theory of Legendre transformation, it arises that, for fixed $(t,q) \in \Omega$, a given $p \in \mathbb R^n$ is associated with exactly one $\dot{q}(p)_{t,q} \in \mathbb R^n$ where the maximum of the RHS in $(1)$ is attained (for $n=1$ the proof is quite evident, it is not for $n>1$).

Since $\dot{q}(p)_{t,q} $ trivially belongs to the interior of the domain of the function $\mathbb R^n \ni \dot{q} \mapsto p\cdot \dot{q} - L(t, q, \dot{q})$, it must be:

$$\left.\nabla_{\dot{q}} \right|_{\dot{q}= \dot{q}(p)_{t,q}} \left( p\cdot \dot{q} - L(t, q, \dot{q})\right) =0\:.$$ In other words (always for fixed $t,q$): $$p = \left.\nabla_{\dot{q}} \right|_{\dot{q}(p)_{t,q}} L(t, q, \dot{q})\:, \quad \forall \dot{q} \in \mathbb R^n\tag{2}$$

As a consequence, (always for fixed $(t,q)\in \Omega$) the map $\mathbb R^n \ni p \mapsto \dot{q}(p)_{t,q} \in \mathbb R^n$ is injective because it admits a right inverse given by the map $\mathbb R^n \ni \dot{q} \mapsto \nabla_{\dot{q}} L(t, q, \dot{q})$ which, in turn, is surjective. However, the latter map is also injective, as one easily proves using the convexity condition and the fact that the domain $\mathbb R^n$ is trivially convex, too. The fact that the $\dot{q}$-Hessian matrix of $L$ is non-singular also implies that the map $(2)$ is $C^1$ with its inverse.

Summing up, the map $(2)$ is a $C^1$ diffeomorphism from $\mathbb R^n$ onto $\mathbb R^n$ and, from $(1)$, we have the popular identity describing the interplay of the Hamiltonian and Lagrangian functions as:

$$H(t,q,p) = p\cdot \dot{q} - L(t, q, \dot{q})\tag{3}$$

which holds true when $p \in \mathbb R^n$ and $\dot{q} \in \mathbb R^n$ are related by means of the $C^1$ diffeomorphism from $\mathbb R^n$ onto $\mathbb R^n$ (for fixed $(t,q)\in \Omega$): $$p = \nabla_{\dot{q}} L(t, q, \dot{q})\:, \quad \forall \dot{q} \in \mathbb R^n \tag{4}\:.$$

By construction, $H= H(t,q,p)$ is a jointly $C^1$ function defined on $\Gamma := \Omega \times \mathbb R^n$. I stress that $L$ is defined on the same domain $\Gamma$ in $\mathbb R^{2n+1}$. The open set $\Gamma$ is equipped by the diffeomorphism: $$\psi: \Gamma \ni (t,q, \dot{q}) \mapsto (t,q, p) \in \Gamma \tag{4'}$$ where $(4)$ holds.

Let us study the relationship between the various derivatives of $H$ and $L$.

I remark that I will not make use of Euler-Lagrange or Hamilton equations anywhere in the following.

Consider a $C^1$ curve $\gamma: (a,b) \ni t \mapsto (t, q(t), \dot{q}(t)) \in \Gamma$, where $t$ has no particular meaning and $\dot{q}(t)\neq \dfrac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}$ generally. The diffeomorphism $\psi$ transforms that curve into a similar $C^1$ curve $t \mapsto \psi(\gamma(t)) = \gamma'(t)$ I will also indicate by $\gamma': (a,b) \ni t \mapsto (t, q(t), p(t)) \in \Gamma$.

We can now evaluate $H$ over $\gamma'$ and $L$ over $\gamma$ and compute the total temporal derivative taking $(3)$ and $(4)$ into account, i.e. we compute:

$$\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}t} H(t, q(t),p(t)) = \frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}t}\left(p(t) \dot{q}(t) - L(t,q(t), \dot{q}(t)) \right)\:.$$

Computations give rise almost immediately to the identity, where both sides are evaluated on the respective curve:

$$\frac{\partial H}{\partial t} + \frac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_q H + \frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_p H = \frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}\dot{q} + p \frac{\mathrm{d}\dot{q}}{\mathrm{d}t} -\frac{\partial L}{\partial t} - \frac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_q L - \frac{\mathrm{d}\dot{q}}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_{\dot{q}} L \:.$$ In the RHS, the second and the last term cancel each other in view of $(4)$, so that: $$\frac{\partial H}{\partial t} + \frac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_q H + \frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_p H = \frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}\dot{q} -\frac{\partial L}{\partial t} - \frac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \nabla_q L \:.$$ Rearranging the various terms into a more useful structure: $$\left(\frac{\partial H}{\partial t}\Biggr|_{\gamma'(t)} + \frac{\partial L}{\partial t}\Biggr|_{\gamma(t)}\right) + \frac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \left( \nabla_q H|_{\gamma'(t)} + \nabla_q L|_{\gamma(t)}\right) + \frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \left(\nabla_p H|_{\gamma'(t)} - \dot{q}|_{\gamma(t)}\right) =0\:.\tag{5}$$

Now observe that actually, since $\gamma$ is generic, $\gamma(t)$ and $\gamma'(t)= \psi(\gamma(t))$ are generic points in $\Gamma$ (however connected by the transformation $(4)$). Moreover, given the point $(t,q, \dot{q}) = \gamma(t) \in \Gamma$, we are free to choose the derivatives $\dfrac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}$ and (using the diffeomorphism) $\dfrac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}$ as we want, fixing $\gamma$ suitably. If we fix to zero all these derivatives, $(5)$ proves that if $(t,q, \dot{q})$ and $(t,q,p)$ are related by means of $(4)$:

$$\left(\frac{\partial H}{\partial t}\Biggr|_{(t,q,p)} + \frac{\partial L}{\partial t}\Biggr|_{(t,q, \dot{q})}\right) =0\:.$$

This result does not depend on derivatives $\mathrm{d}q/\mathrm{d}t$ and $\mathrm{d}p/\mathrm{d}t$ since they do not appear as arguments of the involved functions. So this result holds everywhere in $\Gamma$ because $(t,q, \dot{q})$ is a generic point therein. We conclude that $(5)$ can be re-written as:

$$\frac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \left( \nabla_q H|_{\gamma'(t)} + \nabla_q L|_{\gamma(t)}\right) + \frac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}\cdot \left(\nabla_p H|_{\gamma'(t)} - \dot{q}|_{\gamma(t)}\right) =0\:.\tag{5'}$$

where again, we are considering a generic curve $\gamma$ as before. Fixing such curve such that all components of $\dfrac{\mathrm{d}q}{\mathrm{d}t}$ and $\dfrac{\mathrm{d}p}{\mathrm{d}t}$ vanish except for one of them, for instance $\dfrac{\mathrm{d}q^1}{\mathrm{d}t}$, we find:

$$\left(\frac{\partial H}{\partial q^1}\Biggr|_{(t,q,p)} + \frac{\partial L}{\partial q^1}\Biggr|_{(t,q, \dot{q})}\right) =0\:,$$

if $(t,q, \dot{q})$ and $(t,q,p)$ are related by means of $(4)$, and so on.

Eventually, we end up with the following identities, valid when $(t,q, \dot{q})$ and $(t,q,p)$ are related by means of $(4)$

$$\frac{\partial H}{\partial t}\Biggr|_{(t,q,p)} =- \frac{\partial L}{\partial t}\Biggr|_{(t,q, \dot{q})}\:, \quad \frac{\partial H}{\partial q^k}\Biggr|_{(t,q,p)} =- \frac{\partial L}{\partial q^k}\Biggr|_{(t,q, \dot{q})}\:, \quad \frac{\partial H}{\partial p_k}\Biggr|_{(t,q,p)} = \dot{q}^k\:. \tag{6}$$ The last identity is the one you asked for. As you see, the found identities rely upon the Legendre transformation only, and they do not consider Euler-Lagrange equations or Hamilton ones.

However, exploiting these identities, it immediately arises that $\gamma$ verifies EL equations: $$\frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d}t} \frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{q}^k} - \frac{\partial L}{\partial q^k}=0\:,\quad \frac{\mathrm{d}q^k}{\mathrm{d}t} = \dot{q}^k\quad k=1,\ldots, n$$ if and only if the transformed curve $\gamma'(t) := \psi(\gamma(t))$ verifies Hamilton equations. $$\frac{\mathrm{d} p_k}{\mathrm{d}t} = -\frac{\partial H}{\partial q^k} \:, \quad \frac{\mathrm{d}q^k}{\mathrm{d}t} = \frac{\partial H}{\partial p_k}\quad k=1,\ldots, n\:.$$

Indeed, starting from a curve $\gamma(t) = (t, q(t), \dot{q}(t))$, the first EL equation, exploiting $(4)$ (which is part of the definition of $\psi$) and the second identity in $(6)$, becomes the first Hamilton equation for the transformed curve $\psi (\gamma(t))$. Moreover, the second EL equation, making use of the last identity in $(6)$, becomes the second Hamilton equation for the transformed curve. This procedure is trivially reversible so that, starting from Hamilton equations, you can go back to EL equations.

The first identity in $(6)$ is not used here. However, it implies that the system is or is not invariant under time translations simultaneously in Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formulation (in both cases, that invariance property implies the existence of a constant of motion which is nothing but $H$ represented with the corresponding variables either Lagrangian or Hamiltonian).

As a final comment, notice that $(3)$ and the last identity in $(6)$ (which is nothing but the inverse function of $(2)$ at fixed $(t,q)$) imply $$L(t, q, \dot{q}) = \nabla_p H(t,q,p) \cdot p - H(t,q,p)\:,$$ where $(2)$ is assumed to connect Lagrangian and Hamiltonian variables.

A reference.

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    $\begingroup$ When you are studying time derivative, did you mean to write $\frac{d}{dt} H(t, q(t),p(t)) = \frac{d}{dt}\left(p(t) \dot{q}(t) - L(t,q(t),\dot q(t)) \right)\:.$ $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Apr 4, 2014 at 19:23
  • $\begingroup$ Also I think some of the subsequent signs are wrong. Do you need minus instead of plus in the last two terms of $\frac{\partial H}{\partial t} + \frac{dq}{dt}\cdot \nabla_q H + \frac{dp}{dt}\cdot \nabla_p H = \frac{dp}{dt}\dot{q} + p \frac{d\dot{q}}{dt} -\frac{\partial L}{\partial t} + \frac{dq}{dt}\cdot \nabla_q L + \frac{d\dot{q}}{dt}\cdot \nabla_{\dot{q}} L \:.$ $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Apr 4, 2014 at 19:29
  • $\begingroup$ You say we may choose $q(t)$ and $p(t)$ so that their time derivatives are zero, but we started by fixing $\dot q(t)$ which completely determines $p(t)$ by the diffeomorphism right? $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Apr 4, 2014 at 19:31
  • $\begingroup$ And how can you obtain identities after fixing $p$ and $q$ such that their time derivatives are zero, but then vary $p$ and $q$ and say that the identities you had before still hold true? $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Apr 4, 2014 at 22:14
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    $\begingroup$ Al that discussion is a lecture of my undergraduate second year course on analytic mechanics. Indeed, this lecture usually turns out to be technically a bit difficult for my students. However they eventually pass the final exam ;-) $\endgroup$ Commented Apr 5, 2014 at 7:51
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Alternatively, there exists an extended approach to the Legendre transformation between the Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formalism using $3n$ variables $(q^i,v^i,p_i)$, cf. e.g. Ref. 1. Let us suppress explicit time dependence $t$ from the notation in the following. Consider the extended Lagrangian$^1$

$$ L_E(q,\dot{q},v,p)~:=~ p_i(\dot{q}^i-v^i)+L(q,v)~\stackrel{(2)}{=}~p_i\dot{q}^i-H_E(q,v,p), \tag{1}$$

where the extended Hamiltonian is defined as

$$ H_E(q,v,p)~:=~ p_i v^i-L(q,v).\tag{2} $$

The Hamiltonian is defined as the Legendre transform $$ H(q,p)~:=~ \sup_v H_E(q,v,p)\tag{3}$$ of the Lagrangian.

Here it is important that positions $q^i$, velocities $v^i$, and momenta $p_i$ are treated as independent variables in the corresponding extended stationary action principle.

The Euler-Lagrange (EL) eqs. for the extended Lagrangian (1) read

$$ \begin{align} \dot{p}_i~\approx~& \frac{\partial L(q,v)}{\partial q^i}~=~- \frac{\partial H_E(q,v,p)}{\partial q^i}, \tag{4q}\cr 0~\approx~& p_i-\frac{\partial L(q,v)}{\partial v^i}~=~\frac{\partial H_E(q,v,p)}{\partial v^i},\tag{4v}\cr \dot{q}^i~\approx~&v^i~=~\frac{\partial H_E(q,v,p)}{\partial p_i}.\tag{4p}\end{align}$$

  1. On one hand, by integrating out the $v^i$ variables [i.e. using the eq. (4v)], the extended Lagrangian (1) becomes the so-called Hamiltonian Lagrangian $$ L_H(q,\dot{q},p)~:=~ p_i\dot{q}^i-H(q,p). \tag{5}$$ The EL eqs. for the Hamiltonian Lagrangian (5) are the Hamilton's eqs of motion. This is how we recover the Hamiltonian formalism.

  2. On the other hand, by integrating out the $p_i$ variables [i.e. using the eq. (4p)], we get $v^i \approx\dot{q}^i$. Eliminating the $v^i$ variables as well, the extended Lagrangian becomes the usual Lagrangian $$ L(q,\dot{q}), \tag{6}$$ which leads to the usual Lagrange eqs. of motion. This is how we recover the Lagrangian formalism.

Since the Hamiltonian and Lagrangian approaches (5) and (6) belong to the same extended formalism (1), the two approaches are equivalent. Also note that the complications with implicit dependencies in the standard treatment of the Legendre transformation simplify considerably in the extended formalism (1).

References:

  1. D.M. Gitman and I.V. Tyutin, Quantization of fields with constraints, (1990), Section 2.1.

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$^1$ A dot denotes differentiation wrt. $t$. As usual in order for the extended variational principle to be well-defined, the boundary conditions (BCs) should ensure that the boundary term $\left[p_i\delta q^i \right]^{t=t_f}_{t=t_i}$ vanishes under infinitesimal variations $\delta q^i$.

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In this answer we would like to show via the chain rule and brute force alone how Hamilton's eqs. follow from Lagrange eqs. and from the explicit definition (9) of the Hamiltonian. While there exist more elegant approaches, this method is in some sense the most natural and basic.

I) Lagrangian formalism. Let us assume that the Lagrangian $$ L(q,v,t) \tag{1}$$ is a smooth function of its arguments $q^i$, $v^i$, and $t$. Let us suppress position dependence $q^i$ and explicit time dependence $t$ in the following. Define for later convenience functions

$$ g_i(v)~:=~\frac{\partial L(v)}{\partial v^i}, \qquad i~\in~\{1, \ldots, n\}; \tag{2} $$

and

$$ h(v,p)~:=~p_j v^j -L(v).\tag{3}$$

In eq. (3), the velocities $v^i$ and the momenta $p_i$ are independent variables.

II) Lagrangian eqs. of motion. The Lagrange eqs. read

$$\begin{align} \frac{\partial L(v)}{\partial q^i} ~\stackrel{\text{EL eq.}}{\approx}~& \frac{dg_i(v)}{dt}\cr ~\stackrel{\text{Chain rule}}{=}&~\frac{\partial g_i(v)}{\partial t}+ \dot{q}^j\frac{\partial g_i(v)}{\partial q^j}+ \dot{v}^j\frac{\partial g_i(v)}{\partial v^j},\end{align}\tag{4} $$

where we have identified

$$ v^i~\approx~\dot{q}^i, \qquad i~\in~\{1, \ldots, n\}.\tag{5}$$

[The $\approx$ symbol means equality modulo equations of motion. A dot denotes differentiation wrt. $t$.]

III) Dual Legendre variables. Within the Lagrangian framework, the momenta are defined as

$$ p_i~=~g_i(v), \qquad i~\in~\{1, \ldots, n\}. \tag{6}$$

Here we will only discuss regular$^1$ Legendre transformations, i.e. we will assume that it is possible to invert the relations (6) as

$$ v^i~=~f^i(p), \qquad i~\in~\{1, \ldots, n\}, \tag{7}$$

where

$$ \text{The functions $f$ and $g$ are each others inverse functions}.\tag{8} $$

IV) Hamiltonian. Next define the Hamiltonian as the Legendre transform$^2$ of the Lagrangian:

$$\begin{align} H(p)~:=~& h(f(p),p)\cr ~\stackrel{(3)}{=}~& p_j f^j(p)-(L\circ f)(p).\end{align}\tag{9}$$

V) Hamilton's eqs. of motion. Then

$$\begin{align}\frac{\partial H(p)}{\partial p_i} ~\stackrel{(9)}{=}~~~& f^i(p) + p_j \frac{\partial f^j(p)}{\partial p_i} - \frac{\partial (L\circ f)(p)}{\partial p_i}\cr ~\stackrel{\text{Chain rule}}{=}&~ f^i(p) + \left\{p_j -\left( \frac{\partial L}{\partial v^j} \circ f \right)(p)\right\}\frac{\partial f^j(p)}{\partial p_i} \cr ~\stackrel{(2)}{=}~~~& f^i(p) + \left\{p_j -(g_j\circ f)(p)\right\}\frac{\partial f^j(p)}{\partial p_i}\cr ~\stackrel{(8)}{=}~~~&f^i(p)\cr ~\stackrel{(7)}{=}~~~&v^i\cr ~\stackrel{(5)}{\approx}~~~&\dot{q}^i, \end{align}\tag{10}$$

and

$$\begin{align}-\frac{\partial H(p)}{\partial q^i} ~\stackrel{(9)}{=}~~~& \frac{\partial (L\circ f)(p)}{\partial q^i} - p_j \frac{\partial f^j(p)}{\partial q^i} \cr ~\stackrel{\text{Chain rule}}{=}&~ \left(\frac{\partial L}{\partial q^i}\circ f\right)(p) +\left\{\left( \frac{\partial L}{\partial v^j} \circ f \right)(p)-p_j \right\}\frac{\partial f^j(p)}{\partial q^i}\cr ~\stackrel{(2)}{=}~~~& \left(\frac{\partial L}{\partial q^i}\circ f\right)(p) +\left\{(g_j\circ f)(p)-p_j \right\}\frac{\partial f^j(p)}{\partial q^i} \cr ~\stackrel{(8)}{=}~~~&\left(\frac{\partial L}{\partial q^i}\circ f\right)(p)\cr ~\stackrel{(4)}{\approx}~~~& \left(\frac{dg_i}{dt}\right)\circ f(p) \cr ~\stackrel{(4)}{\approx}~~~&\left(\frac{\partial g_i}{\partial t}\right)\circ f(p) + \dot{q}^j\left(\frac{\partial g_i}{\partial q^j}\circ f\right)(p) + \frac{df^j(p)}{dt} \left(\frac{\partial g_i}{\partial v^j}\circ f\right)(p)\cr ~\stackrel{\text{Chain rule}}{=}&~ \frac{d(g_i\circ f)(p)}{dt}\cr ~\stackrel{(8)}{=}~~~&\dot{p}_i.\end{align} \tag{11}$$

Equation (10) and (11) are Hamilton's eqs.

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$^1$ A singular Legendre transformation leads to primary constraints.

$^2$ Formula (9) is the definition of Legendre transform usually given in the physics literature. In the smooth setting it is slightly more general than the alternative definition

$$ H(p)~\stackrel{(3)}{:=}~ \sup_v h(v,p).\tag{12}$$

for convex Lagrangians given e.g. on Wikipedia. See also e.g. this related Phys.SE post. The stationary point of $h(v,p)$ wrt. $v^i$ reads

$$\begin{align} \frac{\partial h(v,p)}{\partial v^i}~=~&0 \cr\cr (2)+(3)\Updownarrow \cr\cr p_i~=~&g_i(v) \cr\cr (8)\Updownarrow \cr\cr v^i~=~&f^i(p).\end{align}\tag{13}$$

This shows that definition (12) in the pertinent setting leads to definition (9).

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  • $\begingroup$ Notes for later: Minus generalized force $-Q_i(v)$ on RHS of eq. (4) leads to minus generalized force $-Q_i\circ f(p)$ on RHS of eq. (11). ...[Done.] $\endgroup$
    – Qmechanic
    Commented Jul 15 at 16:31
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The gist of the response before the edit remains valid. The hamiltonian is defined as $$H(q,p,t) \equiv p \dot{q} - L(q,\dot{q},t),$$ the Legendre trasform of $L$. The Legendre transform takes $p$ to $\dot{q}$, because $L$ is convex, and this map is defined by $p = \partial L /\partial \dot{q}$. From the latter equation it is obvious that the map is bijective (this can also be seen by the plot if you vary $p$ instead of $\dot{q}$, which I did inadvertently before the edit).

The point of the maximization of this is to define the conjugate momentum, i.e. to define a bijective map between $\dot{q}$ and $p$. If you make a plot of this process, everything should become clear. You don't need the extra variables, simple dependence of the functions on $\dot{q}$, $p$ should suffice.

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  • $\begingroup$ I think you are missing something. What does $\dot q$ mean in your formula for the Hamiltonian, who is only a function of $p, q, t$? $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 3:06
  • $\begingroup$ $p=p(q,\dot{q},t)$, I still don't see what the problem is. You pick a $\dot{q}$ and Legendre transform gives you a $p$, it is really that simple. $\endgroup$
    – auxsvr
    Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 6:49
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    $\begingroup$ It is only after you've found $p$ that you can define the function $\dot{Q}$, but then there's no reason to define it, because you already have what you were looking for. $\endgroup$
    – auxsvr
    Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 7:09
  • $\begingroup$ The trouble is that $\dot q$ is supposed to mean something, right? It's supposed to mean that you can replace $\dot q$ with the derivative of $q$, and the Hamiltonian equalities will workout. $\endgroup$
    – Mark
    Commented Apr 4, 2014 at 21:00
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    $\begingroup$ $\dot{q} = \partial H / \partial p$ is valid regardless of whether $\dot{q}$ is a derivative or not. It could be any function, but if it isn't a derivative of $q$, then this is not the equation of Hamilton. $\endgroup$
    – auxsvr
    Commented Apr 4, 2014 at 22:47
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Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics are not exactly equivalent because they do not cover the same possibilities for the system to be described. Actually, just using the Newtonian laws gives yet another set of possibilities. All sets are partially overlapping as explained in this diagram: [from this talk on Youtube]

enter image description here

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