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I was playing around with a Hamiltonian model for the propagation of photons:

$$ H = c \sqrt{p \cdot p} + V(q) \tag{1}$$

which gives a meaningful set of equations of motion,

$$ \dot{q}_i = c \frac{p_i}{\sqrt{p \cdot p}} \quad \quad \dot{p}_i = - \frac{\partial V(q)}{\partial q_i}. \tag{2}$$

Notice that $$\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q} = c^2\tag{3}$$ always which is why I considered this as modeling the propagation of a massless particle.

However, this Hamiltonian has the following strange feature. If we perform a Legendre transformation to find an associated Lagrangian, $$ \mathcal{L} = p \cdot \dot{q} - H = c \frac{p \cdot p}{\sqrt{p \cdot p}} - \left( c \sqrt{p \cdot p} + V(q) \right) = - V(q) \tag{4}$$ which is not dynamical since $\frac{\partial \mathcal{L}}{\partial \dot{q}} = 0$.

A similar problem arises if I consider a dual Lagrangian system in $q, \dot{q}$ variables and attempt to find a Hamiltonian by Legendre transformation: $$ \mathcal{L} = c \sqrt{\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q}} - V(q) \tag{5}$$ then we get well-defined Euler-Lagrange equations: $$ \frac{\mathrm{d}}{\mathrm{d} t} \left( c \frac{\dot{q}_i}{\sqrt{\dot{q}_i \cdot \dot{q}_i}} \right) = - \frac{\partial V(q)}{\partial q_i}\tag{6} $$ which becomes: $$ (\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q}) \ddot{q}_i - (\dot{q} \cdot \ddot{q}) \dot{q}_i + (\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q})^{3/2} \frac{\partial V(q)}{\partial q_i} = 0.\tag{7} $$ However, if we try to find an associated Hamiltonian, $$ H = p \cdot \dot{q} - \mathcal{L} = c \frac{\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q}}{\sqrt{\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q}}} - \left( c \sqrt{\dot{q} \cdot \dot{q}} - V(q) \right) = V(q) \tag{8}$$ which is again non-dynamical.

What is going on here? Is there an interesting reason that these systems should not admit Lagrangian/Hamiltonian descriptions? In general, when should I expect the Legendre transformation to give me a well-behaved system that reproduces the physics I started with?

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  1. The Lagrangian can be constructed directly by performing a Dirac-Bergmann constraint analysis of OP's Hamiltonian (1). In eq. (3) OP has already correctly identified the primary constraint$^1$ $$\dot{x}^2~:=~g_{\mu\nu}(x)~ \dot{x}^{\mu}\dot{x}^{\nu}~\approx ~0, \qquad \dot{x}^{\mu}~:=~\frac{dx^{\mu}}{d\tau}, \tag{A}$$ where $\tau$ is the world-line (WL) parameter (which does not have to be the proper time).

  2. The Lagrangian becomes the massless limit of$^2$ $$ L~=~\lambda \dot{x}^2-\frac{m^2}{4\lambda} - V,\tag{B} $$ where $\lambda(\tau)$ is a Lagrange multiplier, cf. e.g. this Phys.SE post.

  3. The momentum for the Lagrangian is $$ p_{\mu}~:=~\frac{\partial L}{\partial \dot{x}^{\mu}}~=~2\lambda g_{\mu\nu}(x)~\dot{x}^{\nu}, \tag{C}$$ so that the corresponding Hamiltonian is $$ H~=~\frac{p^2+m^2}{4\lambda} + V. \tag{D}$$

  4. Therefore the Hamiltonian Lagrangian becomes $$ L_H~:=~ p_{\mu} \dot{x}^{\mu} - H. \tag{E} $$

  5. Let us now go to the static gauge $x^0=\tau$. If we integrate out $p^0$ and $\lambda$, we get$^3$ $$\begin{align} \left. L_H\right|_{x^0=\tau} \quad\stackrel{p^0}{\longrightarrow}&\quad {\bf p}\cdot \dot{\bf x}- \underbrace{\left(\lambda + \frac{{\bf p}^2+m^2}{4\lambda} + V\right)}_{\text{Hamiltonian}}\cr\cr \quad\stackrel{\lambda}{\longrightarrow}&\quad {\bf p}\cdot \dot{\bf x} - \underbrace{\left(\sqrt{{\bf p}^2+m^2}+V\right)}_{\text{Hamiltonian}} .\end{align}\tag{F} $$

  6. If we put the mass $m\to 0$ then the square-root Hamiltonian (F) becomes precisely OP's Hamiltonian (1). This confirms our claim that the massless limit of eq. (B) is OP's sought-for Lagrangian.

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$^1$ Let us work in units where the speed of light $c=1$ and with Minkowski sign convention $(-,+,+,+)$.

$^2$ The massterm in eq. (B) is included for generality and is not essential. The only slightly strange thing is that we restrict the $\lambda$ target-space from $\mathbb{R}$ to $\mathbb{R}_+$. This latter point is also discussed in my Phys.SE answer here.

$^3$ A similar argument was given in eq. (3) of my Phys.SE answer here, where the Lagrange multiplier $\lambda=\frac{1}{2e}$ is replaced by an einbein field $e$.

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