Lorenz gauge conditionIn electromagnetism, the Lorenz gauge condition or Lorenz gauge (after Ludvig Lorenz) is a partial gauge fixing of the electromagnetic vector potential by requiring The name is frequently confused with Hendrik Lorentz, who has given his name to many concepts in this field.[1] (See, however, the Note added below for a different interpretation.) The condition is Lorentz invariant. The Lorenz gauge condition does not completely determine the gauge: one can still make a gauge transformation where is the four-gradient and is any harmonic scalar function: that is, a scalar function obeying the equation of a massless scalar field. The Lorenz gauge condition is used to eliminate the redundant spin-0 component in Maxwell's equations when these are used to describe a massless spin-1 quantum field. It is also used for massive spin-1 fields where the concept of gauge transformations does not apply at all. DescriptionIn electromagnetism, the Lorenz condition is generally used in calculations of time-dependent electromagnetic fields through retarded potentials.[2] The condition is where is the four-potential, the comma denotes a partial differentiation and the repeated index indicates that the Einstein summation convention is being used. The condition has the advantage of being Lorentz invariant. It still leaves substantial gauge degrees of freedom. In ordinary vector notation and SI units, the condition is where is the magnetic vector potential and is the electric potential;[3][4] see also gauge fixing. In Gaussian units the condition is[5][6] A quick justification of the Lorenz gauge can be found using Maxwell's equations and the relation between the magnetic vector potential and the magnetic field: Therefore, Since the curl is zero, that means there is a scalar function such that This gives a well known equation for the electric field: This result can be plugged into the Ampère–Maxwell equation, This leaves To have Lorentz invariance, the time derivatives and spatial derivatives must be treated equally (i.e. of the same order). Therefore, it is convenient to choose the Lorenz gauge condition, which makes the left hand side zero and gives the result A similar procedure with a focus on the electric scalar potential and making the same gauge choice will yield These are simpler and more symmetric forms of the inhomogeneous Maxwell's equations. Here is the vacuum velocity of light, and is the d'Alembertian operator with the (+ − − −) metric signature. These equations are not only valid under vacuum conditions, but also in polarized media,[7] if and are source density and circulation density, respectively, of the electromagnetic induction fields and calculated as usual from and by the equations The explicit solutions for and – unique, if all quantities vanish sufficiently fast at infinity – are known as retarded potentials. HistoryWhen originally published in 1867, Lorenz's work was not received well by James Clerk Maxwell. Maxwell had eliminated the Coulomb electrostatic force from his derivation of the electromagnetic 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 varying electric field, which was introduced in Lorenz's paper "On the identity of the vibrations of light with electrical currents". Lorenz's work was the first use of symmetry to simplify Maxwell's equations after Maxwell himself published his 1865 paper. In 1888, retarded potentials came into general use after Heinrich Rudolf Hertz's experiments on electromagnetic waves. In 1895, a further boost to the theory of retarded potentials came after J. J. Thomson's interpretation of data for electrons (after which investigation into electrical phenomena changed from time-dependent electric charge and electric current distributions over to moving point charges).[2] Note added on 26 November 2024: It should be pointed out that Lorenz actually derived the 'condition' from postulated integral expressions for the potentials (nowadays known as retarded potentials), whereas Lorentz (and before him Emil Wiechert) imposed it on the potentials to fix the gauge (see, e.g, his 1904 Encyclopedia article on electron theory). So Lorenz' equation is not a real condition but a mathematical result. It is therefore misleading to attribute the gauge condition to Lorenz. See alsoReferences
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