Bobhawke said:
Is there some deeper reason for demanding gauge invariance other than that it allows us to include interactions between the gauge field and the fermions?
I have seen people claim that it is "in keeping with the spirit of relativity" but I wasnt entirely sure what was meant by that.
thanks
The answer is simple: in order to get the known Maxwell-Lorentz equations expressed via field tensions, which are gauge invariant.
The roots of such "demandings" or "postulates" is in our reversed way of the equation "deriving". Many think that there are some more "fundamental" things than the equations themselves.
Normally the physical equations (Newton, Maxwell, diffusion, etc.) were formulated as the experimental data generalizations. Then it was realized that they could be "derived" from some mathematical "demandings". I take the word "derived" in the double commas on purpose: there is always an "extra" dust apart from the equations obtained in this way, which should be handled additionaly. The simplest example is the principle of the least action for the Newton equations. The simplest Newton theory is a second order equation furnished with the initial position r(t1) and velocity r_dot(t1) data. This is a physical problem formulation.
When you "derive" the equations from the least action principle, you arrive at the same equations furnished with
different constant fixing conditions - initial and final positions r(t1) and r(t2). Although mathematically possible, the latter formulation is not physical: nobody knows the future position r(t2). So this kind of deriving brings something extra which was not foreseen. Usually they "close eyes" at it in the following way: in fact, the physicists replace the "future" data r(t2) with the initial velocity r_dot(t1) to return to a physical problem formulation. That means abandoning the "least action" principle.
Such kinds of "abandonings" happen all the time in "mathematical" derivations of equations.
To arrive at the Maxwell-Lorentz equations from "the first principles", you have to demand the Lagrangian gauge invariance if it is expressed via the four-vector potential. This is a restriction to the Lagrangian
L(A) because the vector potential is not as "fundamental " as the field tensions.
A is somewhat convenient but not unambiguous.
Even with this requirement (gauge invariance, Lorentz covariance) you get some other problems here - divergences due to automatically introducing the self-action. It is so because the interactions term
jA is not correctly "guessed" in this "theoretical" or "mathematical" approach. Renormalizations is nothing but discarding some perturbative contributions. This means again abandoning the original sense of the fundamental constants or the original equations "derived" in the "theoretical" approach.
It looks OK if the "theory" happens to be renormalizable and if it works (like QED), but there are non renormalizable "theories" derived in the very "theoretical" way. Also there are renormalizable theories that do not describe the physical phenomena. So the requirement of renormalizability is not fundamental either.
Good physical theory does not need renormalizations. I have tried to explain how we had got into this trap in my paper "Reformulation instead of Renormalizations", available at
http://arxiv.org/abs/0811.4416. There I also outlined the correct, in my opinion, formulation that is free from the self-action "demand". In this formulation QED is finite and much more physical.
Vladimir Kalitvianski.