Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : This paper summarizes an investigation of the statistical properties of orbits escaping from three different two-degrees-of-freedom Hamiltonian systems which exhibit global stochasticity. Each time-independent H=H(0)+ varepsilon H('), with H(0) an integrable Hamiltonian and varepsilon H(') a nonintegrable correction, not necessarily small. Despite possessing very different symmetries, ensembles of orbits in all three potentials exhibit similar behavior. For varepsilon below a critical varepsilon (0), escapes are impossible energetically. For somewhat higher values, escape is allowed energetically but still many orbits never escape. The escape probability P computed for an arbitrary orbit ensemble decays toward zero exponentially. At or near a critical value varepsilon (1)> varepsilon (0) there is a rather abrupt qualitative change in behavior. Above varepsilon (1), P typically exhibits (1) an initial rapid evolution toward a nonzero P(0)( varepsilon ), the value of which is independent of the detailed choice of initial conditions, followed by (2) a much slower subsequent decay toward zero which, in at least one case, is well fit by a power law P(t) proportional, variant t(-&mgr;), with &mgr; approximately 0.35-0.40. In all three cases, P(0) and the time T required to converge toward P(0) scale as powers of varepsilon - varepsilon (1), i.e., P(0) proportional, variant ( varepsilon - varepsilon (1))(alpha) and T proportional, variant ( varepsilon - varepsilon (1))(beta), and T also scales in the linear size r of the region sampled for initial conditions, i.e., T proportional, variant r(-delta). To within statistical uncertainties, the best fit values of the critical exponents alpha, beta, and delta appear to be the same for all three potentials, namely alpha approximately 0.5, beta approximately 0.4, and delta approximately 0.1, and satisfy alpha-beta-delta approximately 0. The transitional behavior observed near varepsilon (1) is attributed to the breakdown of some especially significant KAM tori or cantori. The power law behavior at late times is interpreted as reflecting intrinsic diffusion of chaotic orbits through cantori surrounding islands of regular orbits. (c) 1999 American Institute of Physics.