Variational symmetry

Definition

Definition 4.10. @olver86
A local group of transformations G acting on MΩ0×U is a variational symmetry group of the a variational problem J[u]=ΩL(x,u(n))dx if whenever Ω is a subdomain with closure Ω¯Ω0, u=f(x) is a smooth function defined over Ω whose graph lies in M, and gG is such that u~=f~(x~)=gf(x~) is a single-valued function defined over ΩΩ0, then

Ω^L(x~,pr(n)(f~(x)))dx=ΩL(x,pr(n)(f(x)))dx.

Induced symmetry in Euler-Lagrange equations

We are going to proceed with one independent variable t and one dependent variable x for simplicity, but can be generalized to any bundle E with coordinates (xi,uα).
A variational symmetry group (even a Noether symmetry group) sends solutions of the Euler-Lagrange equations associated to L to solutions. Observe that:

t0t1L(x,dxdt,t)dt=t0t1L(x,dx dt,t)dt+t0t1ddtF(x,t,s)dt

and since the last term in the right hand side is constant for curves with the same endpoints, a curve maximizes/minimizes the lhs if and only if maximizes/minimizes the firs term of the rhs. This is formalized for variational symmetries in Theorem 4.14 in @olver86. In particular, if G is a variational symmetry group of the variational problem J then it is a symmetry group of the associated Euler-Lagrange equations.

I suppose that Noether symmetries and variational symmetries give rise to a distinguished kind of generalized symmetries, even of Lie point symmetrys, of the corresponding Euler-Lagrange equations.

Infinitesimal criterion for variational symmetries

Theorem 4.12. @olver86.
Theorem
A connected group of transformations G acting on MΩ0×U is a variational symmetry group of the functional J if and only if

pr(n)v(L)+LDivξ=0

for all (x,u(n))M(n) and every infinitesimal generator

v=i=1pξi(x,u)xi+α=1qϕα(x,u)uα

(note that J above is "of first-order" but it can be generalized straightforwardly). Here, Divξ denotes the total divergence of the p-tuple ξ=(ξ1,,ξp).

Noether symmetry

They are more general. See Noether symmetry.