Fr. 150.00

Dawning of Gauge Theory

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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During the course of this century, gauge invariance has slowly emerged from being an incidental symmetry of electromagnetism to being a fundamental geometrical principle underlying the four known fundamental physical interactions. The development has been in two stages. In the first stage (1916-1956) the geometrical significance of gauge-invariance gradually came to be appreciated and the original abelian gauge-invariance of electromagnetism was generalized to non-abelian gauge invariance. In the second stage (1960-1975) it was found that, contrary to first appearances, the non-abelian gauge-theories provided exactly the framework that was needed to describe the nuclear interactions (both weak and strong) and thus provided a universal framework for describing all known fundamental interactions. In this work, Lochlainn O'Raifeartaigh describes the former phase.

O'Raifeartaigh first illustrates how gravitational theory and quantum mechanics played crucial roles in the reassessment of gauge theory as a geometric principle and as a framework for describing both electromagnetism and gravitation. He then describes how the abelian electromagnetic gauge-theory was generalized to its present non-abelian form. The development is illustrated by including a selection of relevant articles, many of them appearing here for the first time in English, notably by Weyl, Schrodinger, Klein, and London in the pre-war years, and by Pauli, Shaw, Yang-Mills, and Utiyama after the war. The articles illustrate that the reassessment of gauge-theory, due in a large measure to Weyl, constituted a major philosophical as well as technical advance.

List of contents










Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction3
1Gauge Transformations in Classical Electromagnetism13
Gravitation and Electricity24
2Aftermath of Einstein's Gravitational Theory38
3Generalizations of Einstein's Theory44
On the Unification Problem of Physics53
Quantum Theory and Five-Dimensional Relativity59
On the Invariant Form of the Wave and Motion Equations for a Charged Point-Mass70
4The Renaissance of Weyl's Idea: EM Gauge Theory77
On a Remarkable Property of the Quantum-Orbits of a Single Electron87
Quantization as an Eigenvalue Problem91
Quantum-Mechanical Interpretation of Weyl's Theory94
5Weyl's Classic, 1929107
Electron and Gravitation121
6Klein's Serendipity, 1938147
On the Theory of Charged Fields152
7Pauli's Dimensional Reduction, 1953166
Meson-Nucleon Interaction and Differential Geometry171
8The Yang-Mills Theory, 1953-54182
Isotopic Spin Conservation and a Generalized Gauge Invariance185
Conservation of Isotopic Spin and Isotopic Gauge Invariance186
9Shaw's SO(2) Approach, 1954-55197
Invariance under General Isotopic Spin Transformations200
10Utiyama's General Approach, 1954-55208
Invariant Theoretical Interpretation of Interaction213
Conclusion240
References243
Index247


About the author










Lochlainn O'Raifeartaigh

Summary

During the course of this century, gauge invariance has slowly emerged from being an incidental symmetry of electromagnetism to being a fundamental geometrical principle underlying the four known fundamental physical interactions. The development has been in two stages. In the first stage (1916-1956) the geometrical significance of gauge-invariance gradually came to be appreciated and the original abelian gauge-invariance of electromagnetism was generalized to non-abelian gauge invariance. In the second stage (1960-1975) it was found that, contrary to first appearances, the non-abelian gauge-theories provided exactly the framework that was needed to describe the nuclear interactions (both weak and strong) and thus provided a universal framework for describing all known fundamental interactions. In this work, Lochlainn O'Raifeartaigh describes the former phase.

O'Raifeartaigh first illustrates how gravitational theory and quantum mechanics played crucial roles in the reassessment of gauge theory as a geometric principle and as a framework for describing both electromagnetism and gravitation. He then describes how the abelian electromagnetic gauge-theory was generalized to its present non-abelian form. The development is illustrated by including a selection of relevant articles, many of them appearing here for the first time in English, notably by Weyl, Schrodinger, Klein, and London in the pre-war years, and by Pauli, Shaw, Yang-Mills, and Utiyama after the war. The articles illustrate that the reassessment of gauge-theory, due in a large measure to Weyl, constituted a major philosophical as well as technical advance.

Additional text

"The book thus performs a double service: it offers a rewarding description of the development of the gauge symmetry idea that
is complete even without the original papers, and it makes those original papers readily accessible to physicists and mathematicians. . . . This book represents an important contribution to the history of fundamental ideas in physics."

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