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| Tags: mechanics, quantum, tensors |
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#21
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David Cross wrote:
This is, again, a GR-related question as I saw this show up in the GR class. So, the basic deal is this: if you can add the gradient of a scalar potential to a vector field, nothing happens when you run it through, if I remember right, the curl of the whole thing. Yes. In 3d: curl grad f = 0 is an identity for any real function f(.) on the manifold (basically reflecting the fact that partial derivatives commute). While normally considered in flat space, this actually holds in any (semi-)Riemannian 3-d space, regardless of curvature. The questions are, how does gauge invariance conflict with the Galilean Transformations, and how exactly does it result in the Lorentz Transformations? (The class got as far as the proof that Maxwell's equations lack Galilean invariance unless you insert a gauge transformation - which I freely admit I didn't entirely follow.) I don't think they actually conflict, but there most definitely is an enormous difference in how "natural" things are. In 4-d spacetime, start with a 1-form potential A, so the Maxwell field tensor F is: F = dA where d is the exterior derivative; clearly F is a 2-form. F is, of course, the field tensor that appears in Maxwell's equations. A gauge transform is simply adding the exterior derivative of any scalar function f(.) on the manifold: A' = A + df F' = dA' = d(A+df) = dA = F Some comments on this quite natural sequence: A) nowhere does this distinguish between space and time. B) this all holds in any (semi-)Riemannian space(time) of any dimension = 2, flat or curved. In fact, this doesn't depend on either the metric or the orientability of the manifold (the 3-d identity: curl grad f = 0 depends on both). C) this all holds completely independent of any coordinates. IOW: every equation above is a tensor equation (all forms are tensors). D) this all holds independent of Maxwell's equations. E) this is basically a re-statement in more general terms of the 3-d identity: curl grad f = 0. F) the basis of a gauge transform is the exterior calculus identity: ddf = 0 -- that is what makes this so "natural". By contrast, in a Galilean world with 3-d space and a separate time, the basis of gauge transforms is Maxwell's equations and a surprising and apparently ad-hoc additional requirement. That is, in order to apply curl grad f = 0 to the vector potential, you must rather surprisingly also add df/dt to the scalar potential -- that just falls out of nowhere, but is required in order to keep Maxwell's equations satisfied. This is a rather "unnatural" coupling of vector and scalar potentials, and also an "unnatural" coupling of space and time -- ostensibly they are separate in this Galilean world, but here spatial derivatives of f are intimately linked with time derivatives. Because of the generality of the above sequence in 4d, I doubt this can be used to determine the form of the Lorentz transform. After all, the identity ddf = 0 is independent of coordinates, so _any_ coordinate transform can be used, not just Lorentz transforms. The unique thing about Lorentz transforms is that they relate INERTIAL frames, and that alone determines their form up to a discrete choice (among the Euclid, Galileo, and Lorentz groups -- experimental observations of course select the latter). Tom Roberts |
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#22
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On Wed, 14 Sep 2005 13:06:52 -0500, Tom Roberts wrote:
David Cross wrote: This is, again, a GR-related question as I saw this show up in the GR class. So, the basic deal is this: if you can add the gradient of a scalar potential to a vector field, nothing happens when you run it through, if I remember right, the curl of the whole thing. Yes. In 3d: curl grad f = 0 is an identity for any real function f(.) on the manifold (basically reflecting the fact that partial derivatives commute). Ah, good. I was going on memory there, not having had my notes in front of me. ![]() By contrast, in a Galilean world with 3-d space and a separate time, the basis of gauge transforms is Maxwell's equations and a surprising and apparently ad-hoc additional requirement. That is, in order to apply curl grad f = 0 to the vector potential, you must rather surprisingly also add df/dt to the scalar potential -- that just falls out of nowhere, but is required in order to keep Maxwell's equations satisfied. This is a rather "unnatural" coupling of vector and scalar potentials, and also an "unnatural" coupling of space and time -- ostensibly they are separate in this Galilean world, but here spatial derivatives of f are intimately linked with time derivatives. Now that you mention it, when the derivation was done in class the scalar potentials were rather arbitrarily introduced wth some hand-waving as to why you needed a gauge transformation to preserve invariance of the fields. Because of the generality of the above sequence in 4d, I doubt this can be used to determine the form of the Lorentz transform. After all, the identity ddf = 0 is independent of coordinates, so _any_ coordinate transform can be used, not just Lorentz transforms. The unique thing about Lorentz transforms is that they relate INERTIAL frames, and that alone determines their form up to a discrete choice (among the Euclid, Galileo, and Lorentz groups -- experimental observations of course select the latter). Unfortunately I had to snip quite a bit in the interest of brevity. I think I may have been using sloppy wording; my impression was that the Lorentz transformations could be derived from gauge transformations, and because electromagnetism does not obey the Galilean transformations, a gauge transformation would not be possible in a Galilean world. I'll be happy to be corrected on that if my impression is incorrect. I haven't seen a lot of gauge stuff yet, so I don't know when you should use one or not. --- David Cross dcross1 AT shaw DOT ca |
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#23
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David Cross wrote:
I haven't seen a lot of gauge stuff yet, so I don't know when you should use one or not. As the underlying theory is gauge invariant, the choice is always yours. Most people use that freedom to make a given computation easier, so for radiation problems they use the Lorentz gauge, and for electrostatics they use the Coulomb gauge, etc. Tom Roberts |
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#24
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David Cross:
Now that you mention it, when the derivation was done in class the scalar potentials were rather arbitrarily introduced wth some hand- waving as to why you needed a gauge transformation to preserve invariance of the fields. Here's why. The fields satisfy the relation, d\phi/dt + div A = 0 We can write that in terms of a component transverse to the propagation direction, a longitudinal component and a scalar component. div A_trans = 0 by definition, leaving div A_long + d\phi/dt = 0 Since light has only transverse polarizations, it has only two degrees of freedom, yet is described by 4 numbers. You can choose A_long and \phi to be anything that satisfies the above, because the first equation is _always_ satisfied. Light is always transverse. The other two components are artifacts (at least classically). |
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#25
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Tom Roberts wrote:
[snip] The basic difference between QED and this approach to quantum gravity is that in QED the field quanta (photons) are neutral, so there are only loops on the charged particle lines. Photons get self correction terms. It's just that the first one involves pair creation/destruction, so it's down by two factors of alpha. The first self correction term for an electron involves the emission and reabsorption of a photon, and so only one factor of alpha. In GR, however, the "charge" is energy, and that is also carried by the field quanta. So instead of just loops on the particle lines, you get loops on the quanta lines as well, and loops on the loops, and loops on the loops on the loops.... The divergence is of a whole different order than in QED. You get loops on loops on loops in QED as well. The big deal in QED is that you can show that all of those loops can be swept under one rug. Or rather, under a finite number of rugs. What's that buzz phrase? Dyson-Schwinger equations? Not sure. Been a looooong time. But the idea is, at each order of alpha, you can show that by modifying the "bare" values of just the mass and charge of the electron, plus the mass of the photon, you can "hide" the infinities. So, a finite set of measurements fixes the entire theory. A similar thing happens in, for example, QCD. There the gluon is the exchange particle, and it carries colour charge. So there is a colour interaction betwen gluons. But, again, you can show (with quite a bit more work) that each order of the loop expansion can have its infinities hidden by adjusting the "bare" values of the colour charge for each particle, plus the mass for each particle. A finite set of measurements fixes the entire theory. In the canonical method of quantizing general relativity, you find that this fails. You wind up having a new kind of infinity at each step in the expansion. It's not because gravitons carry "charge" as such. It's because adding a new order of the loop expansion will produce new divergences that are independent of the bare values of the mass and charge on each object. So you need a new adjustable bare parameter at each order of the expansion. Generally that means you would need to measure a new interaction for each order of the expansion you wanted to make work. Socks |
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#26
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Puppet_Sock:
The big deal in QED is that you can show that all of those loops can be swept under one rug. Or rather, under a finite number of rugs. What's that buzz phrase? Dyson-Schwinger equations? Not sure. Been a looooong time. But the idea is, at each order of alpha, you can show that by modifying the "bare" values of just the mass and charge of the electron, plus the mass of the photon, you can "hide" the infinities. So, a finite set of measurements fixes the entire theory. What you get is that the divergences cancel order by order, so that the number you get at each order is finite (ward identities). That doesnt guarantee that the series converges in the limit of an infinite number of terms, and indeed it most likely does not. The question is then, whther qed is a theory which is independent of anything else. It's quite likely that it isn't, since the only interacting theories which are permissible in a relativistic theory are those which are asymptotically free. But, since qed is just the low energy limit of a theory which is believed to be asymptotically free, qed need only be finite up to an energy known as the landau pole with the landau pole being large (relative to the point that qed is no longer the correct description of the phenomena). I recall a crude estimate of something like 10^250 GeV, which exceeds the energy of the universe and is well above the point at which qcd is already needed to explain the muon magnetic moment). |
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