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This book is an extended version of lectures given by the ?rst
author in 1995-1996 at the Department of Mechanics and Mathematics
of Moscow State University. We believe that a major part of the
book can be regarded as an additional material to the standard
course of Hamiltonian mechanics. In comparison with the original
Russian 1 version we have included new material, simpli?ed some
proofs and corrected m- prints. Hamiltonian equations ?rst appeared
in connection with problems of geometric optics and celestial
mechanics. Later it became clear that these equations describe a
large classof systemsin classical mechanics, physics, chemistry,
and otherdomains. Hamiltonian systems and their discrete analogs
play a basic role in such problems as rigid body dynamics,
geodesics on Riemann surfaces, quasi-classic approximation in
quantum mechanics, cosmological models, dynamics of particles in an
accel- ator, billiards and other systems with elastic re?ections,
many in?nite-dimensional models in mathematical physics, etc. In
this book we study Hamiltonian systems assuming that they depend on
some parameter (usually?), where for?= 0 the dynamics is in a sense
simple (as a rule, integrable). Frequently such a parameter appears
naturally. For example, in celestial mechanics it is accepted to
take? equal to the ratio: the mass of Jupiter over the mass of the
Sun. In other cases it is possible to introduce the small parameter
ar- ?cial
This book is an extended version of lectures given by the ?rst
author in 1995-1996 at the Department of Mechanics and Mathematics
of Moscow State University. We believe that a major part of the
book can be regarded as an additional material to the standard
course of Hamiltonian mechanics. In comparison with the original
Russian 1 version we have included new material, simpli?ed some
proofs and corrected m- prints. Hamiltonian equations ?rst appeared
in connection with problems of geometric optics and celestial
mechanics. Later it became clear that these equations describe a
large classof systemsin classical mechanics, physics, chemistry,
and otherdomains. Hamiltonian systems and their discrete analogs
play a basic role in such problems as rigid body dynamics,
geodesics on Riemann surfaces, quasi-classic approximation in
quantum mechanics, cosmological models, dynamics of particles in an
accel- ator, billiards and other systems with elastic re?ections,
many in?nite-dimensional models in mathematical physics, etc. In
this book we study Hamiltonian systems assuming that they depend on
some parameter (usually?), where for?= 0 the dynamics is in a sense
simple (as a rule, integrable). Frequently such a parameter appears
naturally. For example, in celestial mechanics it is accepted to
take? equal to the ratio: the mass of Jupiter over the mass of the
Sun. In other cases it is possible to introduce the small parameter
ar- ?cial
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