Gauge invariance of Maxwell's equations in the quantum form of the theory is directly related to an invariance under a local phase transformation of the quantum fields. A generalized form of this phase invariance also underlies the theories of the weak and strong interactions. For this reason they are all known as ``gauge theories''.
In a global invariance the same transformation is carried out at all space-time points: it has an ``everywhere simultaneously'' character. In a local invariance, different transformations are carried out at different individual space-time points. For example, electric charge must be locally conserved. A process in which charge is created at one point and destroyed at a distant one is not allowed despite the fact that it conserves the charge overall or globally. The ultimate reason for this is that the global form of charge conservation would necessitate the instantaneous propagation of signals and this conflicts with special relativity.
The origin of gauge invariance in classical electromagnetism lies in
the fact that the potentials and
are not unique for given
physical fields
and
.
The transformations that
and
may undergo, while preserving
and
and hence Maxwell's equations, are called gauge
transformations.
The Klein-Gordon equation is invariant under a phase transformation
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(4.60) |
provided that is independent of
.
If
is a function of
, a derivative term gives
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(4.61) |
and thus the Klein-Gordon equation is no longer invariant.
Invariance may be restored by introducing a classical electromagnetic
field, , which transforms as
under a gauge transformation. This is allowed in the standard Maxwell equations.
Using the so called ``minimal coupling'', the modified Klein-Gordon equation is
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(4.63) |
The presence of the vector field , interacting in a ``universal''
prescribed way with any particle of charge
, is dictated by local
phase invariance.
A vector field such as
, introduced to guarantee local phase
invariance, is called a ``gauge field''.
The principle that the interaction should be so dictated by the phase
(or group) invariance is called the gauge principle: it allows us to
write down the wave equation for the interaction directly from the free
particle equation via the replacement
, where
is call the ``gauge
covariant derivative'' usually just call the ``covariant
derivative''.
The gauge transformation (4.62) produces
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|
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(4.64) |
Multiplying on the left-hand side of the equation with
and then rearranging so we are operating on the produced of
,
we have
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|
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(4.65) |
where
.
In other words the gauge transformation changes the phase of the wave
function only.
The phase factor is the same for all states
, but not necessarily
the same for all space-time points.
As we will show later, all physical observables are represented by
bilinear forms with the structure
and thus a
common phase factor does not play any role in the physics.
Thus we say that the Klein-Gordon equation is gauge invariant for the
minimal coupling
.
General gauge invariance can be shown by first applying the gauge transformation once
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|
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||
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(4.66) |
For arbitrary powers of the operator,
,
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|
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||
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(4.67) |
Gauge invariance consequently also holds for arbitrary operator
functions,
, which can be expanded
in a power series of the
operator.
We can write
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(4.68) |
Thus, minimal coupling is gauge invariant in a very general sense.