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I wrote Hamiltonian action.
I tried to say precisely what the action is by. In the literature (but also in a previous version of our moment map entry) there is often (for instance on Wikipedia, but also in many other sources) an imprecise (not to say: wrong) statement, where an action by Hamiltonian vector fields is not distinguished from one by Hamiltonians.
Thanks, good point.
I made a quick preliminary note at moment map - Relation to constrained mechanics.
Currently symplectic reduction points to BRST-BV formalism and much stuff is hidden there which eventually ought to get its own entries. Maybe later…
You have both and for Hamiltonian symplectomorphisms. Which is better?
The second is supposed to be just for symplectomorphisms, not necessarily Hamiltonian. If I mixed that up, then it needs to be corrected. I can’t check right now, (am at a bus stop, and there is my bus!…)
So it looks like the needs a ’Ham’ in front of it. I’ll do that.
Also, I see that the links from ’Hamiltonian symplectomorphism’ points to symplectomorphism, and there’s nothing there to explain the difference between ordinary ones and Hamiltonian ones.
Thanks, David! You are quite right, there was lacking a bunch of information. I have now added in more lines at Auto-symplectomorphisms.
There’s also a notion of Hamiltonian diffeomorphism, e.g., here. Do we need ? But maybe that’s your .
Yes, that’s just another term for the same concept. Some people also say “symplectic diffeomorphism” instead of “symplectomorphism”, e.g. here. I have added in this alternative terminology to the entry symplectomorphism now.
So then, should we include the direct definition of Hamiltonian diffeomorphism/symplectomorphism from here:
A symplectomorphism Symp(M, ) is said to be a hamiltonian diffeomorphism if there exists a hamiltonian isotopy such that .
Okay, I have expanded
The further subgroup corresponding to those symplectic vector fields which are Hamiltonian vector fields […]
to
The further subgroup corresponding to those symplectic vector fields which are flows of Hamiltonian vector fields coming from a smooth family of Hamiltonians […]
I don’t feel like expanding further on this at the moment. But of course if you or somebody feels like adding more from the literature, please do! Eventually then we could also add formal Definition / Proposition environments to the entry.
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