Conservation laws and Noether's theorem
Classical Mechanics and Relativity: Lecture 8 Theoretical physicist Dr Andrew Mitchell presents an undergraduate lecture course on Classical Mechanics and Relativity at University College Dublin. This is a complete and self-contained course in which everything is derived from scratch. In this lecture I discuss conservation laws within the Lagrangian formulation of classical mechanics. I show why certain physical quantities are conserved (do not change with time), and the conditions for which this arises. In the second part I introduce Noether's theorem, which makes the deep connection between continuous symmetries and conservation laws. We will see explicitly how translational invariance is responsible for conserved linear momentum, while rotational symmetry implies conservation of angular momentum. Full lecture course playlist: • Classical Mechanics and Relativity lecture... Course textbooks: "Classical Mechanics" by Goldstein, Safko, and Poole "Classical Mechanics" by Morin "Relativity" by Rindler

Worked examples in classical Lagrangian mechanics

Noether's Theorem Explained (Part 1/6) - Introduction

Emmy Noether and The Fabric of Reality

Symmetries & Conservation Laws: A (Physics) Love Story

Reinventing Entropy | Compression is Intelligence Part 1

Neil Turok on how theoretical physics went wrong and why universities don’t encourage originality

Coordinate transformations and the metric of space

The Principle of Least Action

Your Daily Equation #25: Noether's Amazing Theorem: Symmetry and Conservation

Why string theory isn't real physics | Roger Penrose, Brian Greene, and Eric Weinstein

Noether's Theorem and The Symmetries of Reality

Poisson Brackets and Canonical Transformations

The most beautiful formula not enough people understand

The Hardest Questions in Physics | World Science Festival

I finally find least action principle satisfying

Emmy Noether: The Greatest Forgotten Mathematician in History

The Symmetries of the universe

Lecture 2: Symmetries and Conservation Laws

Symmetry and conservation laws: Noether's contribution to physics - Uhlenbeck

