And yet, at the fundamental level, they remind us that constraints in physics are not merely simplifications—they are active shapers of possibility. The wheel that refuses to slip, the blade that refuses to slide, the ice skater’s edge—all carve out a geometry of motion richer than any set of fixed coordinates can capture.
The Lie brackets of constraint vector fields generate directions not initially allowed. That’s why you can parallel park: the bracket of “move forward” and “turn” gives “sideways slide” at the Lie algebra level, and through a sequence of motions, you achieve net motion in the forbidden direction. dynamics of nonholonomic systems
In nonholonomic systems, we cannot. The constraints are linear in velocities, so we can use Lagrange multipliers to enforce them. But here’s the deep part: (in the ideal case). That means D’Alembert’s principle still holds—but only for virtual displacements consistent with the constraints. And yet, at the fundamental level, they remind