In mathematics and physics, Herglotz's variational principle, named after German mathematician and physicist Gustav Herglotz, is an extension of the Hamilton's principle, where the Lagrangian L explicitly involves the action 
 as an independent variable, and 
 itself is represented as the solution of an ordinary differential equation (ODE) whose right hand side is the Lagrangian 
, instead of an integration of 
.[1][2] Herglotz's variational principle is known as the variational principle for nonconservative Lagrange equations and Hamilton equations.
Suppose there is a Lagrangian 
 of 
 variables, where 
 and 
 are 
 dimensional vectors, and 
 are scalar values. A time interval 
 is fixed. Given a time-parameterized curve 
, consider the ODE 
When 
 are all well-behaved functions, this equation allows a unique solution, and thus 
 is a well defined number which is determined by the curve 
. Herglotz's variation problem aims to minimize 
 over the family of curves 
 with fixed value 
 at 
 and fixed value 
 at 
, i.e. the problem 
Note that, when 
 does not explicitly depend on 
, i.e. 
, the above ODE system gives exactly 
, and thus 
, which degenerates to the classical Hamiltonian action. The resulting Euler-Lagrange-Herglotz equation is 
which involves an extra term 
 that can describe the dissipation of the system.
Derivation
In order to solve this minimization problem, we impose a variation 
 on 
, and suppose 
 undergoes a variation 
 correspondingly, then
and since the initial condition is not changed, 
. The above equation a linear ODE for the function 
, and it can be solved by introducing an integrating factor 
, which is uniquely determined by the ODE 
By multiplying 
 on both sides of the equation of 
 and moving the term 
 to the left hand side, we get 
Note that, since 
, the left hand side equals to 
and therefore we can do an integration of the equation above from 
 to 
, yielding 
where the 
 so the left hand side actually only contains one term 
, and for the right hand side, we can perform the integration-by-part on the 
 term to remove the time derivative on 
:
and when 
 is minimized, 
 for all 
, which indicates that the underlined term in the last line of the equation above has to be zero on the entire interval 
, this gives rise to the Euler-Lagrange-Herglotz equation.
Examples
One simple one-dimensional (
) example[3] is given by the Lagrangian 
The corresponding Euler-Lagrange-Herglotz equation is given as 
which simplifies into 
This equation describes the damping motion of a particle in a potential field 
, where 
 is the damping coefficient.
References
- ^ Gaset, Jordi; Lainz, Manuel; Mas, Arnau; Rivas, Xavier (2022-11-30), "The Herglotz variational principle for dissipative field theories", Geometric Mechanics, 01 (2): 153–178, arXiv:2211.17058, doi:10.1142/S2972458924500060, retrieved 2025-05-06
 
- ^ Georgieva, Bogdana (2012). The Variational Principle of Hergloz and Related Results (Report). GIQ. doi:10.7546/giq-12-2011-214-225.
 
- ^ "Tesis of Manuel Lainz" (PDF). www.icmat.es. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2024-04-19. Retrieved 2025-05-06.