10

Why is adding gauge fixing directly different from doing so by Lagrange multiplier? For simplicity, we don't use field model.

Direct method

Consider a system $$L(x,\dot x,y,\dot y)=\frac{\dot x^2}{2}+\dot x y+\frac{(x-y)^2}{2} \tag{1} \, .$$ This system has gauge symmetry $$\delta x=f(t),\ \delta y=f(t)-\dot f(t)\tag{2}$$ for arbitrary $f(t)$. Under this transformation, $$\delta L = \frac{d}{dt}(x f+\frac{1}{2}f^2)\tag{3} \, .$$ The Euler-Lagrange equations are: \begin{align} L1 &: \quad \ddot{x}+\dot y- x+ y =0 \tag{4} \\ L2 &: \quad \dot x - x+y = 0 \, .\tag{5} \end{align} We see $$L1= \frac{d}{dt}L2+L2\tag{6}$$ so $(4)$ is not independent of $(5)$ and we need only to solve $(5)$, i.e. $$\dot x =x-y \tag{7} , .$$ We see $y(t)$ is a gauge freedom, and only fixing $y(t)$ we can solve $x(t)$.

Suppose we choose the gauge $y=0$. Then we solve $\dot x-x = 0$ with result $$x= c e^t \, .\tag{8}$$ with constant $c$ determined by initial value.

Lagrange multiplier method

Now let's try with the Lagrange multiplier method, $$L'(x,\dot x , y, \dot y, \lambda)= \frac{\dot x^2}{2}+\dot x y+\frac{(x-y)^2}{2} - \lambda y \, .\tag{9}$$ The Euler-Lagrange equations are \begin{align} \ddot{x}+\dot y- x+ y &= 0 \tag{10} \\ \dot x - x+y-\lambda &= 0 \tag{11} \\ y &= 0 \, . \tag{12} \end{align} Substituting $(12)$ into $(10,11)$ gives $$\ddot{x} - x =0 \quad \text{and} \quad \dot x-x=\lambda$$ therefore $$x = c_1 e^{-t}+c_2 e^t \longrightarrow \lambda = -2 c_1 e^{-t} \, .\tag{13}$$ It's obvious that $(13)$ is different from $(8)$.

Why do these two methods give different results?

Note: $y=0$ is a well-defined gauge condition because for any function $y(t)$ I can always choose gauge transformation $f(t)= c e^t + e^t\int_1^{t} e^{-u}y(u)du $ such that $y = 0$

Qmechanic
  • 220,844
maplemaple
  • 2,217

2 Answers2

5

I) OP's Lagrangian (1) can be rewritten as

$$\begin{align}L ~=~& \frac{\dot{x}^2}{2} + \dot{x}y + \frac{(x-y)^2}{2}\cr ~\stackrel{z\equiv x-y}{=}&~\frac{1}{2}\frac{d(x^2)}{dt}+ \frac{(z-\dot{x})^2}{2}\cr ~\stackrel{w\equiv z-\dot{x}}{=}&~ \underbrace{\frac{1}{2}\frac{d(x^2)}{dt}}_{\text{total time derivative}}+ \frac{w^2}{2}, \end{align}\tag{A}$$ with infinitesimal gauge quasi-symmetry

$$\begin{align} \delta x~=~&f, \cr \delta y~=~&f-\dot{f}, \cr \delta z~=~&\dot{f}, \cr \delta w~=~&0,\cr \delta L~=~&\frac{d(xf)}{dt}. \end{align} \tag{B}$$

Let us take $x$ and $w$ and as the fundamental variables. Remarkably it is then a priori not necessary to impose any boundary conditions (BCs)! The $x$ variable is a gauge degree of freedom. The EL eq. for $w$ is $$ w~\approx~0. \tag{C}$$

A small problem arises: OP's gauge-fixing condition $$ x-\dot{x}-w~\equiv~x-z~\equiv~y~\approx~0 \tag{D}$$ is not transversal to the gauge orbits, i.e. it does not completely fix the gauge, i.e. one may freely add a contribution $ce^t$ to $x$ without leaving the gauge-fixing surface. However, that could in principle be cured by adding one pertinent BC. Then OP's gauge-fixing condition (D) is well-posed.

II) OP's gauge-fixed Lagrangian (9) can be rewritten as

$$\begin{align}L^{\prime} ~=~&L-\lambda y\cr ~=~& \frac{1}{2}\frac{d(x^2)}{dt}+ \frac{w^2}{2}-\lambda(x-\dot{x}-w). \end{align}\tag{E}$$

The EL eqs. read $$\begin{align} \dot{\lambda}+\lambda~\approx~&0,\cr w+\lambda~\approx~&0,\cr x-\dot{x}-w~\approx~&0,\end{align}\tag{F}$$ with solution $$\begin{align} -\lambda ~=~&w~=~ 2 c_1 e^{-t}, \cr x ~=~& c_1 e^{-t}+c_2 e^t ,\end{align}\tag{G} $$ in agreement with OP's eq. (13).

We can now identify the cause of the disagreement with section I: The Lagrange multiplier (which is supposed to be a non-dynamical auxiliary variable) has effectively turned dynamical: Its eom (F) depends on a time-derivative $\dot{\lambda}$. We must choose $c_1=0$. Then agreement with section I is restored.

III) An alternative way of phrasing the problem is that the constraint (D) is effectively non-holonomic, which opens Pandora's box, cf. e.g. this and this Phys.SE posts.

Qmechanic
  • 220,844
0

Let me summarize some key points in my opinion:

  • $y$ is not a free variable that can be arbitrarily fixed (like a gauge field) but instead is an auxiliary variable.
  • The Lagrangian you start with is actually a total time derivative.
  • You change the Lagrangian in the Lagrange multipliers case.

Since there are no dynamic term, $g(\dot{y})$ in Eqn.(1), $y$ is an auxiliary variable: You can replace it by its equation of motion, which is $$y=x-\dot{x}$$ After this, you see that your Lagrangian is $$L(x,\dot{x})=\frac{d}{dt}\left(\frac{1}{2}x^2\right)$$ This is the reason why you see a symmetry $$x\to x+f(t)$$ in the first place: No matter how you change $x$, the difference in Lagrangian will be total time derivative as the initial Lagrangian itself is total time derivative.

In general, you cannot add the result of EOM to the Lagrangian: You would get incorrect answers. However, for auxiliary fields which lack dynamical terms, this is possible. In your example, $y$ is not a gauge freedom but is an auxiliary field.

In your Eqn.(9) you change the Lagrangian as you cannot arbitrarily choose $y$. In fact, if you repeat the same calculation with the Lagrangian $$L'(x,\dot{x},y,\dot{y},\lambda)=L(x,\dot{x},y,\dot{y})+\lambda (x-y-\dot{x})$$ you get the same consistent results.