- Lorenz gauge condition
In
electromagnetism , the Lorenz gauge or Lorenz gauge condition are common misnomers for a particular choice of the electromagneticfour-potential . The potential is chosen to satisfy the condition , which was first proposed by the Danish physicistLudvig Lorenz . It is aLorentz invariant condition. It is frequently called the "Lorentz condition" because of confusion withHendrik Lorentz , after whom Lorentz invariance is named. The Lorenz condition is often erroneously assumed to fix the gauge, which it apparently does not, as indeed one can make a gauge transformation with a harmonic scalar function , , which does not affect the Lorenz condition ,:The Lorenz condition though restricts the class of functions for gauge transformations to harmonic functions.
The Lorenz condition is used to eliminate the redundant spin-0 component in the (1/2,1/2) representation of the Lorentz group. It is equally used for massive spin-1 fields where the concept of gauge transformations does not apply at all.
Description
In
electromagnetism , the Lorenz condition is generally used incalculation s of time-dependentelectromagnetic field s throughretarded potential sref|McDonald. The condition is:
where is the
four-potential , the comma denotes apartial differentiation and the repeated index indicates that theEinstein summation convention is being used. The condition has the advantage of beingLorentz invariant . It still leaves substantial gauge degrees of freedom.In ordinary vector notation and
SI units, the condition is::
where A is the
magnetic vector potential and φ is theelectric potential ; see alsoGauge fixing .In Gaussian units the condition is:
:
It can be shown that the physical information in the
Maxwell's equations can be expressed in the operationally simpler and symmetric form::
:
History
When originally published, Lorenz's work was not received well by
James Clerk Maxwell . Maxwell had eliminated the Coulomb electrostatic force from his derivation of theelectromagnetic wave equation since he was working in what would nowadays be termed the Coulomb gauge. The Lorenz gauge hence contradicted Maxwell's original derivation of the EM wave equation by introducing a retardation effect to the Coulomb force and bringing it inside the EM wave equation alongside the time varyingelectric field . Lorenz's work was the first symmetrizing shortening of Maxwell's equations after Maxwell himself published his1865 paper. In1888 , retarded potentials came into general use afterHeinrich Rudolf Hertz 's experiments onelectromagnetic wave s. In1895 , a further boost to the theory of retarded potentials came afterJ. J. Thomson 's interpretation of data forelectron s (after which investigation intoelectrical phenomena changed from time-dependentelectric charge andelectric current distributions over to movingpoint charge s). ref|McDonald00ee also
*
Coulomb gauge
*Gauge fixing
*Weyl gauge External articles, references, and further reading
;General
* Eric W. Weisstein, " [http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/LorenzGauge.html Lorenz Gauge] ".
* Kirk T. McDonald, "The Relation Between Expressions for Time-Dependent Electromagnetic Fields Given by Jefimenko and by Panofsky and Phillips". Dec. 5, 1996
** Ibid.;Further reading
* L. Lorenz, "On the Identity of the Vibrations of Light with Electrical Currents" Philos. Mag. 34, 287-301, 1867.
* J. van Bladel, "Lorenz or Lorentz?". IEEE Antennas Prop. Mag. 33, p. 69, 1991.
* R. Becker, "Electromagnetic Fields and Interactions", chap. DIII. Dover Publications, New York, 1982.
* A. O'Rahilly, "Electromagnetics", chap. VI. Longmans, Green and Co, New York, 1938. ;History
*R. Nevels, C.-S. Shin, "Lorenz, Lorentz, and the gauge", IEEE Antennas Prop. Mag. 43, 3, pp. 70-1, 2001.
* E. Whittaker, "A History of the Theories of Aether and Electricity ", Vols. 1-2. New York: Dover, p. 268, 1989.-----
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