Replies: 1 comment 2 replies
-
This is the Forum you wrote about? :-) The Hamiltonian (or Lagrangian) has in most cases no explicit notion of time, but "generalized" impulses: interdependencies of variables and the corresponding changes of them. In a sense, the notion of invariance as used in AMMs is just one half of a full Hamiltonian: the dynamics is missing. Hamiltonian mechanics can (in most cases) be easily transformed into Lagrangian and vice versa: a so called "Legendre transformation". Some things are easier in Hamilton formalism, but difficult in Lagrange, for other it is the opposite. With best regards, |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
2 replies
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
Uh oh!
There was an error while loading. Please reload this page.
-
It'd be interesting to know if the math behind CFMMs can be structured in a Hamiltonian/Lagrangian framework? (My physics background is far enough in my past I don't know which of these would make more sense...)
There is no useful sense of time in the fundamental CFMM math, but I wonder if replacing this with the numeraire makes sense? If R is the quantity of an asset and Q is the quantity of the numeraire, derivatives dR/dQ already play a fundamental role in the AMM (as spot prices)... and R * dQ/dR also plays a fundamental role (total value of the asset in the system)...
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions