The LLE describes an anisotropic magnet. The equation is described in (Faddeev & Takhtajan 2007, chapter 8) as follows: it is an equation for a vector fieldS, in other words a function on R1+n taking values in R3. The equation depends on a fixed symmetric 3-by-3 matrixJ, usually assumed to be diagonal; that is, . The LLE is then given by Hamilton's equation of motion for the Hamiltonian
(where J(S) is the quadratic form of J applied to the vector S)
which is
In 1+1 dimensions, this equation is
In 2+1 dimensions, this equation takes the form
which is the (2+1)-dimensional LLE. For the (3+1)-dimensional case, the LLE looks like
Integrable reductions
In the general case LLE (2) is nonintegrable, but it admits two integrable reductions:
a) in 1+1 dimensions, that is Eq. (3), it is integrable
Guo, Boling; Ding, Shijin (2008), Landau-Lifshitz Equations, Frontiers of Research With the Chinese Academy of Sciences, World Scientific Publishing Company, ISBN978-981-277-875-8