Foundations of Quantum Field Theory. Klaus D Rothe
1-particle states should thus transform according to a one-dimensional representation of the little group.
The Aharonov Bohm effect shows that it is the vector potential Aμ which plays the fundamental role in quantum mechanics. This vector potential however transforms under the
5.1The radiation field in the Lorentz gauge
In the absence of a source, the Maxwell equations (Coulomb’s and Ampère’s law) become
with the usual identification
for the magnetic and electric fields, respectively.
The electromagnetic field tensor Fμν can be written in the form
and is evidently invariant under the gauge transformation
In terms of the vector potential Aμ the homogeneous Maxwell equations (5.1) read
By choosing Λ in (5.3) to be given by
we arrive at the Lorentz gauge
In this gauge the equations of motion (5.4) read
The general solution of this equation is well known from the course in electrodynamics and is given by
where a(k, ν), μ = 0...3 are the Fourier coefficients and ϵμ are the corresponding polarization tensors playing a role analogous to the Dirac spinors. In the Lorentz gauge (5.5) we must have
With Aμ real, we choose the polarization tensors to be real. The choice of the Fourier coefficients is then dictated by the reality of the electromagnetic field. In particle language it corresponds to the fact that the photon is its own antiparticle!
The Fourier coefficients
5.2The radiation field in the Coulomb gauge
The Coulomb gauge
can be reached by performing the gauge transformation (5.3) with
In this gauge, the free Maxwell equations for the vector potential read:
Setting μ = 0, it follows from here that
This is Laplace’s equation; it only has the trivial solution if we require that the vector potential tends to zero at infinity. In the Coulomb gauge we thus have in the absence of sources, A0 = 0. This shows that in this gauge the vector potential possesses only two degrees of freedom, corresponding to a radiation field, in agreement with our general considerations in Section 6 of Chapter 2, showing that a zero mass particle can exist only in two helicity states. Correspondingly we have for the general solution of (5.7) in the gauge (5.6)
with
Define the two orthogonal vectors
Introducing as in Section 6 of Chapter 2 the light-like standard 4-momentum k by
describing the motion of a photon in z-direction with energy
Indeed,
Inspired by our considerations in Section 6 of Chapter 2 on the Little group, we now define the polarization tensors for a photon with general momentum
where