# Coulomb gauge fixing and “normalizability”

The Setup

Let Greek indices be summed over $0,1,\dots, d$ and Latin indices over $1,2,\dots, d$. Consider a vector potential $A_\mu$ on $\mathbb R^{d,1}$ defined to gauge transform as $$A_\mu\to A_\mu'=A_\mu+\partial_\mu\theta$$ for some real-valued function $\theta$ on $\mathbb R^{d,1}$. The usual claim about Coulomb gauge fixing is that the condition $$\partial^i A_i = 0$$ serves to fix the gauge in the sense that $\partial^iA_i' = 0$ only if $\theta = 0$. The usual argument for this (as far as I am aware) is that $\partial^i A'_i =\partial^iA_i + \partial^i\partial_i\theta$, so the Coulomb gauge conditions on $A_\mu$ and $A_\mu'$ give $\partial^i\partial_i\theta=0$, but the only sufficiently smooth, normalizable (Lesbegue-integrable?) solution to this (Laplace's) equation on $\mathbb R^d$ is $\theta(t,\vec x)=0$ for all $\vec x\in\mathbb R^d$.

My Question

What, if any, is the physical justification for the smoothness and normalizability constraints on the gauge function $\theta$?

EDIT 01/26/2013 Motivated by some of the comments, I'd like to add the following question: are there physically interesting examples in which the gauge function $\theta$ fails to be smooth and/or normalizable? References with more details would be appreciated. Lubos mentioned that perhaps monopoles or solitons could be involved in such cases; I'd like to know more!

Cheers!

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Good question which is clearly more general than Coulomb gauge fixing! –  Michael Brown Jan 26 '13 at 9:03
@MichaelBrown Thanks! Yeah I'm learning some sugra at the moment, and this argument that exploits the vanishing of smooth, normalizable solutions to Laplace's equation seems to arise quite often, for instance when one wants to eliminate certain harmonic gauge field components. –  joshphysics Jan 26 '13 at 9:09
Smoothness of $\theta$ is needed because $A_\mu$ that is modified by derivatives of $\theta$ has to remain continuous - or smooth, but one level weaker requirement of smoothness than for $\theta$. The normalizability just means that $\theta$ never diverges in the bulk of the space and decreases sufficiently quickly at infinity. When it doesn't, one would have to discuss monopoles, instantons etc. but those things are a non-issue for U(1) gauge theory. –  Luboš Motl Jan 26 '13 at 9:51
At any rate "sufficient smoothness" and "normalizability" are conditions that are often required in physics and physicists don't spend much time with such stuff - they're natural physical conditions for various reasons. Mathematicians are often obsessed with these mathematical details - they're needed for rigorous proofs - but physicists are not. In fact, physicists really think exactly in the opposite way than what you suggest. They would assume that functions in physics are sufficiently smooth and well behaved - and if some of them are not, they would get concerned or alert. –  Luboš Motl Jan 26 '13 at 9:53
@joshphysics: To focus the answers, perhaps you could point out a couple of references where you have encountered this use of the word normalizable? –  Qmechanic Jan 26 '13 at 13:06

It means that the gauge ambiguity is practically removed in the Coulomb gauge if you deal with a "nice" $\mathbf{A}$ (which is your purpose).

However, it does not mean you only deal with the radiation (propagating solutions). Transversal $\mathbf{A}$ is different from zero for a uniformly moving charge too.

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A quick answer, if I may.

You need $\theta$ to be smooth since you want to derive it. So mathematics imposes you to choose $\theta$ smooth.

Now the trick: choosing $\theta$ to be smooth means you can always impose $\mathbf{A}$ to be smooth, and use several patches related to each other by a gauge transform. Then you should always discuss smooth vector potential... do you ? Well, you should, if you want to make proper math. But physicists usually don't care about that, and choose a singular vector potential to prove that the field configuration hosts a monopole. The prototype example is the vortex associated with the U(1) Lie group / algebra. See for instance the paper by Dirac:

Dirac, P. A. M. Quantised Singularities in the Electromagnetic Field. Proc. R. Soc. London. Ser. A 133, 60–72 (1931)

where the vector potential is singular at the north or south pole. Note that the theory of connection on fiber bundle was still to be discovered at that time ! The correct mathematical picture came late in physics, as far as I know at least. Here a beautiful reading

Wu, T. T. & Yang, C. N. Concept of nonintegrable phase factors and global formulation of gauge fields. Phys. Rev. D 12, 3845–3857 (1975)

where they choose two parameterisation of the circle: one for the south and one for the north pole, these two parameterisations of the vector potential being related to the other one by a gauge transformation.

How about normalisable then? Well, I never heard about that, and mainly one defines everything in compact space(s), where it scarcely makes sense to impose norm.

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