A charge q in an electric potential ϕ acquires potential energy qϕ.
Likewise, a charge density ρ(x) aquires potential energy density ρ(x)ϕ(x).
A moving charge q in an electromagnetic 4-potential A ``acquires'' an additional momentum qA so that the canonical momentum equals qA plus the kinetic momentum.
Q2. Is there a physically meaningful notion of the energy-momentum tensor T(x) which a 4-current density j(x) ``acquires'' in a 4-potential A(x)?
Q3. Is there a tensor field T(x) sush that
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T(x) depends only on j(x), the electromagnetic 4-potential A(x), and maybe their derivatives;
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T(x)=0 identically, once j(x)=0 identically;
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T(x)+Tfield(x) is conserved, where Tfield(x) is the (Belinfante-Rosenfeld) energy-momentum tensor of the field itself.
One expects the same tensor field T(x) for Q2 and Q3.
An immediate idea could be to apply the Noether theorem. But the theorem is not applicable here because the Lagrangian explicitly depends on x through the term Aμ(x)jμ(x), hence is NOT translational invariant. Notice that the field j(x) is given, it is not dynamical.
A guess for the required tensor could be Tμν=Aνjμ−δμνAλjλ. But this does not work because the divergence ∂μTμν=Fμνjμ−Aμ∂νjμ contains an extra term in addition to the Lorentz 4-force, which contradicts to point 3 above.
Setting formally T(x)=−Tfield(x) does not work because it contradicts to point 2.
In the literature known to me (e.g., Landau-Lifshitz, sections 32-33 and 94 of volume 2) such tensor T(x) is never constructed. Instead, a particular type of particles producing the current j(x) is chosen and the energy-momentum tensor of the particles is added to Tfield(x). This results in a conserved tensor. But the result depends on the particular type of the particles, not just on j(x), which contradicts to point 1.
I would be very grateful to you for any insight, optimally including an explicit YES/NO answer for either Q2 or Q3.
EDIT Qestion Q1 has been removed (Q1:Is the quantity ρ(x)ϕ(x) a part of some Lorentz covariant tensor field T(x)? The answer is trivially yes: just take T(x)=Aν(x)jμ(x).)
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2017-04-05 15:37 (UTC), posted by SE-user Mikhail Skopenkov