Discussion Overview
The discussion revolves around the applicability of Noether's theorem to gauge symmetries, particularly in the context of electromagnetism and quantum field theory. Participants explore whether gauge symmetries yield conserved quantities and how they relate to global symmetries.
Discussion Character
- Debate/contested
- Technical explanation
- Conceptual clarification
Main Points Raised
- Some participants question whether Noether's theorem applies to gauge symmetries, suggesting that gauge symmetry may not be the "right type" of symmetry for this theorem.
- Others argue that Noether's theorem can derive conserved quantities for both global and local gauge symmetries, citing examples from quantum electrodynamics (QED) and quantum chromodynamics (QCD).
- A participant raises the issue of conserved charges in the context of a free photon field, questioning what conserved charge corresponds to gauge symmetry.
- Some participants note that in QED without electrons, the conserved Noether charge is zero, but a local conservation law, represented by Gauss's law, still exists.
- There is discussion about the implications of gauge symmetry in the photon sector being trivial in QED compared to non-abelian gauge symmetries in QCD.
- Participants mention the divergence-free nature of the stress-energy tensor for the free electromagnetic field, which leads to conservation of momentum and energy, but clarify that this is not directly related to gauge symmetry.
- Some express curiosity about the relationship between classical and quantum theories regarding gauge symmetries and constraints, referencing Dirac's work on constraint quantization.
Areas of Agreement / Disagreement
Participants express differing views on the applicability of Noether's theorem to gauge symmetries, with some asserting its relevance while others question it. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the nature of conserved quantities associated with gauge symmetries.
Contextual Notes
Participants acknowledge that the treatment of gauge symmetries may differ from global symmetries, and there are unresolved mathematical steps and assumptions regarding the implications of gauge fixing and the relationship between classical and quantum frameworks.