Lagrangian for a charged particle in a magnetic field

AI Thread Summary
The discussion focuses on deriving the Lagrangian for a charged particle in a magnetic field, specifically the term -q\vec{v}\cdot\vec{A}. The Lagrangian is expressed as L = T - V = (1/2)mu^2 + q\vec{u} \cdot \vec{A}, and the Euler-Lagrange equations are applied to derive the equations of motion. A key point of confusion arises regarding the manipulation of terms involving the magnetic vector potential A, particularly how certain derivatives are treated. The discussion clarifies that a total derivative should be used instead of a partial derivative to correctly relate the terms and yield the expected equation of motion, which aligns with the Lorentz force law. The conversation emphasizes the importance of understanding the distinction between partial and total derivatives in this context.
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Hey I have a question that was almost completely answered in this thread:
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=116098

Specifically someone interpreted his question to be how exactly do you get that
the term in the Lagrangian corresponding to the magnetic potential is

-q\vec{v}\cdot\vec{A}

da_willem said:
The only proofs I have seen rely on the Lagrangian principle. E.g.

The Lagrangian

L=T-V=\frac{1}{2}mu^2 + q\vec{u} \cdot \vec{A}

Subsituted in the Euler Lagrange equations

\frac{d}{dt}\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{x}}=\frac{\partial L}{\partial x}

Using generalised coordinates x, y, z with generalized velocities \dot{x}, \dot{y}, \dot{z} and u^2=\dot{x}^2+\dot{y}^2+\dot{z}^2

yields

\frac{d}{dt}(m\dot{x}+qA_x)=q\frac{\partial}{\partial x}(\dot{x}A_x+\dot{y}A_y+\dot{z}A_z)
m \ddot{x}+q \frac{\partial A_x}{\partial t} =q(\dot{x}\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial x}+\dot{y}\frac{\partial A_y}{\partial x}+\dot{z}\frac{\partial A_z}{\partial x})

or after rearranging

m \ddot{x}=-q(\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial x}+\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial t})+q[\dot{y}(\frac{\partial A_y}{\partial x}-\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial y})+\dot{z}(\frac{\partial A_z}{\partial x}-\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial z})]=qE_x+q(\dot{y}B_z-\dot{z}B_y)

Which is exactly the x-component of the usual Lorentz force. So the potential term V=-q\vec{u} \cdot \vec{A} can be motivated by the fact that it yields the right equation of motion.

Sadly, I had already worked up to the second to last line prior to his post, and I'm not clear
on what happened at that point. I would assume he added in \partial \phi/\partial x because the electric potential is zero and that expression will look more like the typical E_x that you see. The part that loses me though is how did he turn the term

\dot{x}\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial x}+\dot{y}\frac{\partial A_y}{\partial x}+\dot{z}\frac{\partial A_z}{\partial x} into \dot{y}(\frac{\partial A_y}{\partial x}-\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial y})+\dot{z}(\frac{\partial A_z}{\partial x}-\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial z})

Just from the looks of things it might be that:
\dot{x}\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial x} + \dot{y}\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial y} + \dot{z}\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial z} = 0

I don't really see why that should be true, so is there another way he could have done that, or what is the reasoning behind that equation? Also, sorry in advance. I did take a look at Jackson but he jumps into some relativistic stuff that I'm not ready for right now and we don't have a copy of Franklin in our library.
 
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It's explained in the book: "The Classical Theory of Fields" by Landau and Lifschitz.
 
<br /> m\frac{d{\vec v}}{dt}=<br /> q[-\nabla\phi-\partial_t{\vec A}+{\vec v}\times(\nabla\times{\vec A})] <br /> = q[-\nabla\phi-\partial_t{\vec A}-({\vec v}\dot\nabla){\vec A}<br /> +\nabla({\vec v}\cdot{\vec A})]<br /> =\nabla[-q\phi+q{\vec v}\cdot{\vec A}]-q\frac{d{\vec A}}{dt}.<br />
 
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Count Iblis said:
It's explained in the book: "The Classical Theory of Fields" by Landau and Lifschitz.

Alright thanks. It looks like my problem happened here:

\frac{d}{dt}(m\dot{x}+qA_x)=q\frac{\partial}{\partial x}(\dot{x}A_x+\dot{y}A_y+\dot{z}A_z)

when I assumed that you could take that derivative of A_x with respect to time partially. If I had taken a total derivative I'd have seen instead:

m\ddot{x}+q\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial t} + q(\dot{x}\partial_x A_x + \dot{y}\partial_y A_x + \dot{z} \partial_z A_x) =q(\dot{x}\partial_x A_x +\dot{y}\partial_x A_y+\dot{z}\partial_z A_z)

and that gives me what I was hoping for:

m \ddot{x}=-q\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial t}+q[\dot{y}(\frac{\partial A_y}{\partial x}-\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial y})+\dot{z}(\frac{\partial A_z}{\partial x}-\frac{\partial A_x}{\partial z})]=qE_x+q(\dot{y}B_z-\dot{z}B_y)
 
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