nomadreid said:
[...]the topic of the Lagrangian, [...] That L= T-V should be stationary [...]
As Dalespam points out: the condition is that the
time integral of the Lagrangian, varied over a range of trajectories, is an extremum.
I take an example from the discussion by Hanc and Taylor, linked to in post #7
A particle travels a distance in space, and during that trajectory there is at one point a jump in potential energy. (For instance, a particle travels a long pipe, enters a linear accelerator, and then exits again. That is, the section where the acceleration occurs is very short compared to the total journey. For simplicity let's say the exit pipe is just as long as the entry pipe.)
In a diagram the worldline of the particle will consist of two straight sections, at some angle to each other.
Along each individual section there is constant kinetic energy and constant potential energy. At the point where the two straight sections meet there is an exchange of energy: the potential energy decreases with a particular amount, and the kinetic energy increases with that amount.
Now vary the worldline away from the actual worldline, by varying the angles of the two sections. (What that does is that it shifts the duration of the two sections, keeping the total duration of the journey the same.)
Along any worldline that isn't the actual worldline the change in kinetic energy will not match the change in potential energy. Another way of saying this: if one section of the worldline is too steep the other section will be too shallow.
Following Hanc and Taylor the following
action can be defined for this particular case:
S = (T - V)_1 t_1 + (T - V)_2 t_2
This action has a minimum for the case of the actual worldline.
This can be generalized to the case of summing over a sequence of infinitisimally short sections, with a different potential between each pair of adjacent sections.
The actual worldline is the one where at each passage from section to section the exchange of kinetic energy and potential energy matches.
As we know, summing over a sequence of infinitisimally short sections is integration. You evaluate the time integral of the Lagrangian, over a range of variations of the wordline. This evaluation reaches an extremum in the case of the actual worldline.
Hanc and Taylor would be uncomfortable with this presentation, because they want to derive the actual worldline from the action principle, rather than derive the action principle from a precalculated wordline. All along their aim is to show that the action principle is
more profound than the Newtonian calculation.