I've started with the Maxwell-Chern-Simons lagrangian (in 2+1 dimensions):
$$L_{MCS}=-\frac{1}{4}F^{\mu \nu}F_{\mu\nu}+\frac{g}{2} \epsilon^{\mu \nu \rho}A_\mu\partial_\nu A_\rho$$
From this lagrangian I've derived equations of motion
$$\partial_\mu F^{\mu \nu}+\frac{g}{2}\epsilon^{ \nu \alpha \beta}F_{\alpha \beta}=0$$
I know statement that this equations could be rewrite in terms of $\widetilde{F}^\mu=\frac{1}{2}\epsilon^{ \nu \alpha \beta}F_{\alpha \beta}$ as
$$\left(\partial_\nu \partial^\nu+g^2\right)\widetilde{F}^\mu=0 $$
But I cannot do it explicitly. I've tried a lot of ways but only what I've found is $\partial_\nu \widetilde{F}^\nu=0$ (just differentiated initial equation of motion with respect to $x_\nu$ and used antisymmetric property of $F_{\mu\nu}$.)
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-01-18 13:43 (UTC), posted by SE-user Oiale