A and ϕ inside a Faraday cage?

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cuallito
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Are A and ϕ always zero inside a Faraday cage, like E and B are?

If not, can its design be modified to accomplish that? If not, is there an analogous mechanism that'd always have A=0 and ϕ=0 inside?
 
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If the em. field is zero somewhere, i.e., ##\vec{E}=\vec{B}=0##, then ##\Phi=\partial_t \chi/c## and ##vec{A}=-\vec{\nabla} \chi## for an arbitrary scalar field ##\chi##. The gauge potentials are not uniquely defined by the equations of motion describing a physical situation. That's, because Maxwell's electrodynamics is a gauge theory. The potentials do not have a specific physical meaning but the observable electromagnetic field ##\vec{E}=-\partial_t \vec{A}/c - \vec{\nabla} \chi##, ##\vec{B}=\vec{\nabla} \times \vec{A}##, which is a gauge-invariant quantity, has.