Scalar electrodynamics

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In theoretical physics, scalar electrodynamics is a theory of a U(1) gauge field coupled to a charged spin 0 scalar field that takes the place of the Dirac fermions in "ordinary" quantum electrodynamics. The scalar field is charged, and with an appropriate potential, it has the capacity to break the gauge symmetry via the Abelian Higgs mechanism.

Matter content

The model consists of a complex scalar field minimally coupled to a gauge field .

This article discusses the theory on flat spacetime (Minkowski space) so these fields can be treated (naïvely) as functions , and . The theory can also be defined for curved spacetime but these definitions must be replaced with a more subtle one. The gauge field is also known as a principal connection, specifically a principal connection.

Lagrangian

The dynamics is given by the Lagrangian density

where

  • is the electromagnetic field strength, or curvature of the connection.
  • is the covariant derivative of the field
  • is the electric charge
  • is the potential for the complex scalar field.

Gauge-invariance

This model is invariant under gauge transformations parameterized by . This is a real-valued function

Differential-geometric view

From the geometric viewpoint, is an infinitesimal change of trivialization, which generates the finite change of trivialization In physics, it is customary to work under an implicit choice of trivialization, hence a gauge transformation really can be viewed as a change of trivialization.

Higgs mechanism

Scalar chromodynamics

References

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