I'm reading Landau's Book.
He tries to conclude the law of inertia from the Lagrange equations.
For that, he argues (by nice suppositions about space and time), that the lagrangian must depend only on the velocity. More specifically, only on the square of the velocity.
The point is, since the lagrange equations is:
$$\nabla_x L+(\nabla_{\dot{x}}L)' \equiv 0$$
He gets that $(\nabla_{\dot{x}}L)'\equiv 0$, which implies $\nabla_{\dot{x}}L=constant$ (in time, along the trajectory).
Now here is my problem: he concludes that $\dot{x}$ is constant. How? He doesn't know anything about $L$, besides the "symmetry" properties. For instance, $L\equiv 0 $ satisfies all of the properties required from such $L$, and we would not be able to infer that $\dot{x}$ is constant. In fact, any curve would be extremal with respect to the action.
What is his reasoning, then?
I am afraid that the next section depends on the assumption that $v=\text{const}$ for a free particle. I just found this question:
http://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/23098/deriving-the-lagrangian-for-a-free-particle
which is similar to mine (and even includes other doubts I was going to ask). The answer seems to respond it, but since I don't know Noether's Theorem and the other tools involved in that answer, I'll refrain from this matter for some time.
I'm accepting your answer, since you answered my question. Thank you again.
– Aloizio Macedo Jun 17 '15 at 02:45