Fock–Schwinger Gauge
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In the physics of gauge theories, gauge fixing (also called choosing a gauge) denotes a mathematical procedure for coping with redundant
degrees of freedom Degrees of freedom (often abbreviated df or DOF) refers to the number of independent variables or parameters of a thermodynamic system. In various scientific fields, the word "freedom" is used to describe the limits to which physical movement or ...
in field variables. By definition, a gauge theory represents each physically distinct configuration of the system as an
equivalence class In mathematics, when the elements of some set S have a notion of equivalence (formalized as an equivalence relation), then one may naturally split the set S into equivalence classes. These equivalence classes are constructed so that elements a ...
of detailed local field configurations. Any two detailed configurations in the same equivalence class are related by a gauge transformation, equivalent to a
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along unphysical axes in configuration space. Most of the quantitative physical predictions of a gauge theory can only be obtained under a coherent prescription for suppressing or ignoring these unphysical degrees of freedom. Although the unphysical axes in the space of detailed configurations are a fundamental property of the physical model, there is no special set of directions "perpendicular" to them. Hence there is an enormous amount of freedom involved in taking a "cross section" representing each physical configuration by a ''particular'' detailed configuration (or even a weighted distribution of them). Judicious gauge fixing can simplify calculations immensely, but becomes progressively harder as the physical model becomes more realistic; its application to
quantum field theory In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles and ...
is fraught with complications related to renormalization, especially when the computation is continued to higher
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. Historically, the search for
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and computationally tractable gauge fixing procedures, and efforts to demonstrate their equivalence in the face of a bewildering variety of technical difficulties, has been a major driver of mathematical physics from the late nineteenth century to the present.


Gauge freedom

The archetypical gauge theory is the
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formulation of continuum electrodynamics in terms of an electromagnetic four-potential, which is presented here in space/time asymmetric Heaviside notation. The
electric field An electric field (sometimes E-field) is the physical field that surrounds electrically charged particles and exerts force on all other charged particles in the field, either attracting or repelling them. It also refers to the physical field fo ...
E and
magnetic field A magnetic field is a vector field that describes the magnetic influence on moving electric charges, electric currents, and magnetic materials. A moving charge in a magnetic field experiences a force perpendicular to its own velocity and to ...
B of Maxwell's equations contain only "physical" degrees of freedom, in the sense that every ''mathematical'' degree of freedom in an electromagnetic field configuration has a separately measurable effect on the motions of test charges in the vicinity. These "field strength" variables can be expressed in terms of the
electric scalar potential The electric potential (also called the ''electric field potential'', potential drop, the electrostatic potential) is defined as the amount of work energy needed to move a unit of electric charge from a reference point to the specific point in ...
\varphi and the
magnetic vector potential In classical electromagnetism, magnetic vector potential (often called A) is the vector quantity defined so that its curl is equal to the magnetic field: \nabla \times \mathbf = \mathbf. Together with the electric potential ''φ'', the magnetic v ...
A through the relations: = -\nabla\varphi - \frac\,, \quad = \nabla\times. If the transformation is made, then B remains unchanged, since (with the identity \nabla \times \nabla \psi = 0) = \nabla\times (+ \nabla \psi) = \nabla\times. However, this transformation changes E according to \mathbf E = -\nabla\varphi - \frac - \nabla \frac = -\nabla \left( \varphi + \frac\right) - \frac. If another change is made then E also remains the same. Hence, the E and B fields are unchanged if one takes any function and simultaneously transforms A and ''φ'' via the transformations () and (). A particular choice of the scalar and vector potentials is a gauge (more precisely, gauge potential) and a scalar function ''ψ'' used to change the gauge is called a gauge function. The existence of arbitrary numbers of gauge functions corresponds to the U(1) gauge freedom of this theory. Gauge fixing can be done in many ways, some of which we exhibit below. Although classical electromagnetism is now often spoken of as a gauge theory, it was not originally conceived in these terms. The motion of a classical point charge is affected only by the electric and magnetic field strengths at that point, and the potentials can be treated as a mere mathematical device for simplifying some proofs and calculations. Not until the advent of quantum field theory could it be said that the potentials themselves are part of the physical configuration of a system. The earliest consequence to be accurately predicted and experimentally verified was the Aharonov–Bohm effect, which has no classical counterpart. Nevertheless, gauge freedom is still true in these theories. For example, the Aharonov–Bohm effect depends on a line integral of A around a closed loop, and this integral is not changed by \mathbf \rightarrow \mathbf + \nabla \psi\,. Gauge fixing in non-abelian gauge theories, such as Yang–Mills theory and general relativity, is a rather more complicated topic; for details see Gribov ambiguity, Faddeev–Popov ghost, and frame bundle.


An illustration

As an illustration of gauge fixing, one may look at a cylindrical rod and attempt to tell whether it is twisted. If the rod is perfectly cylindrical, then the circular symmetry of the cross section makes it impossible to tell whether or not it is twisted. However, if there were a straight line drawn along the length of the rod, then one could easily say whether or not there is a twist by looking at the state of the line. Drawing a line is gauge fixing. Drawing the line spoils the gauge symmetry, i.e., the circular symmetry U(1) of the cross section at each point of the rod. The line is the equivalent of a gauge function; it need not be straight. Almost any line is a valid gauge fixing, i.e., there is a large gauge freedom. In summary, to tell whether the rod is twisted, the gauge must be known. Physical quantities, such as the energy of the torsion, do not depend on the gauge, i.e., they are gauge invariant.


Coulomb gauge

The Coulomb gauge (also known as the transverse gauge) is used in
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and
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and is defined by the gauge condition (more precisely, gauge fixing condition) \nabla\cdot(\mathbf,t)=0\,. It is particularly useful for "semi-classical" calculations in quantum mechanics, in which the vector potential is quantized but the Coulomb interaction is not. The Coulomb gauge has a number of properties:


Lorenz gauge

The
Lorenz gauge In electromagnetism, the Lorenz gauge condition or Lorenz gauge, for Ludvig Lorenz, is a partial gauge fixing of the electromagnetic vector potential by requiring \partial_\mu A^\mu = 0. The name is frequently confused with Hendrik Lorentz, who ha ...
is given, in SI units, by: \nabla\cdot + \frac\frac=0 and in Gaussian units by: \nabla\cdot + \frac\frac=0. This may be rewritten as: \partial_ A^ = 0. where A^\mu = \left ,\tfrac\varphi,\,\mathbf\,\right/math> is the electromagnetic four-potential, ∂μ the
4-gradient In differential geometry, the four-gradient (or 4-gradient) \boldsymbol is the four-vector analogue of the gradient \vec from vector calculus. In special relativity and in quantum mechanics, the four-gradient is used to define the properties and re ...
sing the metric signature (+, −, −, −)">metric_signature.html" ;"title="sing the metric signature">sing the metric signature (+, −, −, −) It is unique among the constraint gauges in retaining manifest Lorentz invariance. Note, however, that this gauge was originally named after the Danish physicist Ludvig Lorenz and not after Hendrik Lorentz; it is often misspelled "Lorentz gauge". (Neither was the first to use it in calculations; it was introduced in 1888 by George F. FitzGerald.) The Lorenz gauge leads to the following inhomogeneous wave equations for the potentials: \frac\frac - \nabla^2 = \frac \frac\frac - \nabla^2 = \mu_0 \mathbf It can be seen from these equations that, in the absence of current and charge, the solutions are potentials which propagate at the speed of light. The Lorenz gauge is ''incomplete'' in some sense: There remains a subspace of gauge transformations which can also preserve the constraint. These remaining degrees of freedom correspond to gauge functions which satisfy the wave equation \frac = c^2 \nabla^2\psi These remaining gauge degrees of freedom propagate at the speed of light. To obtain a fully fixed gauge, one must add boundary conditions along the light cone of the experimental region. Maxwell's equations in the Lorenz gauge simplify to \partial_\mu \partial^\mu A^\nu = \mu_0 j^\nu where j^\nu = \left ,c\,\rho,\,\mathbf\,\right/math> is the four-current. Two solutions of these equations for the same current configuration differ by a solution of the vacuum wave equation \partial_\mu \partial^\mu A^\nu = 0. In this form it is clear that the components of the potential separately satisfy the Klein–Gordon equation, and hence that the Lorenz gauge condition allows transversely, longitudinally, and "time-like" polarized waves in the four-potential. The transverse polarizations correspond to classical radiation, i.e., transversely polarized waves in the field strength. To suppress the "unphysical" longitudinal and time-like polarization states, which are not observed in experiments at classical distance scales, one must also employ auxiliary constraints known as
Ward identities Ward may refer to: Division or unit * Hospital ward, a hospital division, floor, or room set aside for a particular class or group of patients, for example the psychiatric ward * Prison ward, a division of a penal institution such as a priso ...
. Classically, these identities are equivalent to the
continuity equation A continuity equation or transport equation is an equation that describes the transport of some quantity. It is particularly simple and powerful when applied to a conserved quantity, but it can be generalized to apply to any extensive quantity. S ...
\partial_\mu j^\mu = 0. Many of the differences between classical and quantum electrodynamics can be accounted for by the role that the longitudinal and time-like polarizations play in interactions between charged particles at microscopic distances.


''Rξ'' gauges

The ''R''ξ gauges are a generalization of the Lorenz gauge applicable to theories expressed in terms of an
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with Lagrangian density \mathcal. Instead of fixing the gauge by constraining the
gauge field In physics, a gauge theory is a type of field theory in which the Lagrangian (and hence the dynamics of the system itself) does not change (is invariant) under local transformations according to certain smooth families of operations (Lie groups) ...
''a priori'', via an auxiliary equation, one adds a gauge ''breaking'' term to the "physical" (gauge invariant) Lagrangian \delta \mathcal = -\frac The choice of the parameter ''ξ'' determines the choice of gauge. The Landau gauge is classically equivalent to Lorenz gauge: it is obtained in the limit ''ξ'' → 0 but postpones taking that limit until after the theory has been quantized. It improves the rigor of certain existence and equivalence proofs. Most
quantum field theory In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles and ...
computations are simplest in the Feynman–'t Hooft gauge, in which ; a few are more tractable in other ''R''ξ gauges, such as the Yennie gauge . An equivalent formulation of ''R''ξ gauge uses an auxiliary field, a scalar field ''B'' with no independent dynamics: \delta \mathcal = B\,\partial_ A^ + \frac B^2 The auxiliary field, sometimes called a Nakanishi–Lautrup field, can be eliminated by "completing the square" to obtain the previous form. From a mathematical perspective the auxiliary field is a variety of Goldstone boson, and its use has advantages when identifying the
asymptotic state In analytic geometry, an asymptote () of a curve is a line such that the distance between the curve and the line approaches zero as one or both of the ''x'' or ''y'' coordinates tends to infinity. In projective geometry and related contexts, ...
s of the theory, and especially when generalizing beyond QED. Historically, the use of ''R''ξ gauges was a significant technical advance in extending quantum electrodynamics computations beyond one-loop order. In addition to retaining manifest Lorentz invariance, the ''Rξ'' prescription breaks the symmetry under local gauge ''transformations'' while preserving the ratio of
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s of any two physically distinct gauge ''configurations''. This permits a change of variables in which infinitesimal perturbations along "physical" directions in configuration space are entirely uncoupled from those along "unphysical" directions, allowing the latter to be absorbed into the physically meaningless
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of the
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. When ξ is finite, each physical configuration (orbit of the group of gauge transformations) is represented not by a single solution of a constraint equation but by a Gaussian distribution centered on the extremum of the gauge breaking term. In terms of the Feynman rules of the gauge-fixed theory, this appears as a contribution to the
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for internal lines from virtual photons of unphysical
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. The photon propagator, which is the multiplicative factor corresponding to an internal photon in the Feynman diagram expansion of a QED calculation, contains a factor ''g''μν corresponding to the Minkowski metric. An expansion of this factor as a sum over photon polarizations involves terms containing all four possible polarizations. Transversely polarized radiation can be expressed mathematically as a sum over either a
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or circularly polarized basis. Similarly, one can combine the longitudinal and time-like gauge polarizations to obtain "forward" and "backward" polarizations; these are a form of
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in which the metric is off-diagonal. An expansion of the ''g''μν factor in terms of circularly polarized (spin ±1) and light-cone coordinates is called a
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. Spin sums can be very helpful both in simplifying expressions and in obtaining a physical understanding of the experimental effects associated with different terms in a theoretical calculation. Richard Feynman used arguments along approximately these lines largely to justify calculation procedures that produced consistent, finite, high precision results for important observable parameters such as the anomalous magnetic moment of the electron. Although his arguments sometimes lacked mathematical rigor even by physicists' standards and glossed over details such as the derivation of Ward–Takahashi identities of the quantum theory, his calculations worked, and Freeman Dyson soon demonstrated that his method was substantially equivalent to those of Julian Schwinger and Sin-Itiro Tomonaga, with whom Feynman shared the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physics. Forward and backward polarized radiation can be omitted in the
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of a quantum field theory (see Ward–Takahashi identity). For this reason, and because their appearance in spin sums can be seen as a mere mathematical device in QED (much like the electromagnetic four-potential in classical electrodynamics), they are often spoken of as "unphysical". But unlike the constraint-based gauge fixing procedures above, the ''Rξ'' gauge generalizes well to non-abelian gauge groups such as the SU(3) of
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. The couplings between physical and unphysical perturbation axes do not entirely disappear under the corresponding change of variables; to obtain correct results, one must account for the non-trivial
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of the embedding of gauge freedom axes within the space of detailed configurations. This leads to the explicit appearance of forward and backward polarized gauge bosons in Feynman diagrams, along with Faddeev–Popov ghosts, which are even more "unphysical" in that they violate the spin–statistics theorem. The relationship between these entities, and the reasons why they do not appear as particles in the quantum mechanical sense, becomes more evident in the
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of quantization.


Maximal Abelian gauge

In any non- Abelian gauge theory, any maximal Abelian gauge is an ''incomplete'' gauge which fixes the gauge freedom outside of the
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. Examples are *For SU(2) gauge theory in D dimensions, the maximal Abelian subgroup is a U(1) subgroup. If this is chosen to be the one generated by the Pauli matrix ''σ''3, then the maximal Abelian gauge is that which maximizes the function \int d^Dx \left left(A_\mu^1\right)^2+\left(A_\mu^2\right)^2\right,, where _\mu = A_\mu^a \sigma_a\,. *For SU(3) gauge theory in D dimensions, the maximal Abelian subgroup is a U(1)×U(1) subgroup. If this is chosen to be the one generated by the Gell-Mann matrices ''λ''3 and ''λ''8, then the maximal Abelian gauge is that which maximizes the function \int d^Dx \left left(A_\mu^1\right)^2 + \left(A_\mu^2\right)^2 + \left(A_\mu^4\right)^2 + \left(A_\mu^5\right)^2 + \left(A_\mu^6\right)^2 + \left(A_\mu^7\right)^2\right,, where _\mu = A_\mu^a \lambda_a This applies regularly in higher algebras (of groups in the algebras), for example the Clifford Algebra and as it is regularly.


Less commonly used gauges

Various other gauges, which can be beneficial in specific situations have appeared in the literature.


Weyl gauge

The Weyl gauge (also known as the Hamiltonian or temporal gauge) is an ''incomplete'' gauge obtained by the choice \varphi=0 It is named after
Hermann Weyl Hermann Klaus Hugo Weyl, (; 9 November 1885 – 8 December 1955) was a German mathematician, theoretical physicist and philosopher. Although much of his working life was spent in Zürich, Switzerland, and then Princeton, New Jersey, he is assoc ...
. It eliminates the negative-norm
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, lacks manifest Lorentz invariance, and requires longitudinal photons and a constraint on states.


Multipolar gauge

The gauge condition of the multipolar gauge (also known as the line gauge, point gauge or Poincaré gauge (named after
Henri Poincaré Jules Henri Poincaré ( S: stress final syllable ; 29 April 1854 – 17 July 1912) was a French mathematician, theoretical physicist, engineer, and philosopher of science. He is often described as a polymath, and in mathematics as "The ...
)) is: \mathbf\cdot\mathbf = 0. This is another gauge in which the potentials can be expressed in a simple way in terms of the instantaneous fields \mathbf(\mathbf,t) = -\mathbf \times\int_0^1 \mathbf(u \mathbf,t) u \, du \varphi(\mathbf,t) = -\mathbf \cdot \int_0^1 \mathbf(u \mathbf,t) du.


Fock–Schwinger gauge

The gauge condition of the Fock–Schwinger gauge (named after Vladimir Fock and Julian Schwinger; sometimes also called the relativistic Poincaré gauge) is: x^A_=0 where ''x''μ is the position four-vector.


Dirac gauge

The nonlinear Dirac gauge condition (named after Paul Dirac) is: A_ A^ = k^2


References


Further reading

* * {{QED Electromagnetism Quantum field theory Quantum electrodynamics Gauge theories pl:Cechowanie (fizyka)#Wybór cechowania