Bobhawke said:
Is there any reason why we couldn't get EM in terms of either
1) A rank 2 field strength tensor F_{\mu \nu} with no symmetry/anti-symmetry requirements, and then choose a gauge to get rid of all the redundant dofs
or
2) A field tensor of rank>2 A_{\mu\nu\rho...} with again the redundant dofs eliminated by fixing the gauge
The simplest derivation possible of the Lorentz force:
Start with.
p_c^\mu ~~=~~ p^\mu+eA^\mu ~~=~~ -\partial^\mu\,\phi
Where p is the inertial momentum depending only on the velocity
and \phi is the phase of the field. The combination of p and eA can
not have any curl since \phi is a scalar. So any curl in eA must
be compensated by an opposite curl in p.
-(\partial^\mu p^\nu-\partial^\nu p^\mu) ~~=~~ e(\partial^\mu A^\nu-\partial^\nu A^\mu)
One obtains the Lorentz force by using U_\nu=\partial x_\nu/\partial \tau to turn all
the spatial derivatives into time derivatives.
-\frac{\partial p^\nu}{\partial x_\mu}\,\frac{\partial x_\nu}{\partial \tau} ~~+~~\frac{\partial p^\mu}{\partial x_\nu}\,\frac{\partial x_\nu}{\partial \tau}~~=~~ eF^{\mu\nu}\,U_\nu
The first term cancels, it represents the derivatives of the
invariant mass p_\nu p^\nu, so we obtain.
\frac{\partial p^\mu}{\partial \tau}~~=~~ eF^{\mu\nu}\,U_\nuRegards, Hans