The following section is adapted from the very clear and concise feature article by Tuckerman and Martyna [20].
The equations of motion are time reversible (invariant to the transformation
) and the total energy is a constant of motion
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Now consider a system of
particles occupying a container
of volume
and evolving under Hamilton's equation of motion.
The Hamiltonian will be constant and equal to the total energy
of the system.
In addition, the number of particles and the volume are assumed to be fixed.
Therefore, a dynamical trajectory (i.e. the positions and momenta of all particles over time)
will generate a series of classical states having constant
,
, and
,
corresponding to a microcanonical ensemble. If the dynamics generates all
possible states then an average over this trajectory will yield the same
result as an average in a microcanonical ensemble. The energy conservation
condition,
which imposes a restriction
on the classical microscopic states accessible to the system, defines a hypersurface
in the phase space called a constant energy surface. A system evolving according to
Hamilton's equation of motion will remain on this surface.
The assumption that a system, given an infinite amount of time, will cover
the entire constant energy hypersurface is known as the ergodic hypothesis.
Thus, under the ergodic hypothesis, averages over a trajectory of a system
obeying Hamilton's equation are equivalent to averages over the microcanonical ensemble.
In addition to equilibrium quantities also dynamical properties are defined through
ensemble averages. Time correlation functions are important because of their relation to
transport coefficients and spectra via linear response theory [21,22].
The important points are: by integration of Hamilton's equation of motion for a number of particles in a fixed volume, we can create a trajectory; time averages and time correlation functions of the trajectory are directly related to ensemble averages of the microcanonical ensemble.