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Diamagnetic inequality
Mathematical inequality relating the derivative of a function to its covariant derivative From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In mathematics and physics, the diamagnetic inequality relates the Sobolev norm of the absolute value of a section of a line bundle to its covariant derivative. The diamagnetic inequality has an important physical interpretation, that a charged particle in a magnetic field has more energy in its ground state than it would in a vacuum.[1][2]
To precisely state the inequality, let denote the usual Hilbert space of square-integrable functions, and the Sobolev space of square-integrable functions with square-integrable derivatives. Let be measurable functions on and suppose that is real-valued, is complex-valued, and . Then for almost every , In particular, .
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Proof
For this proof we follow Elliott H. Lieb and Michael Loss.[1] From the assumptions, when viewed in the sense of distributions and for almost every such that (and if ). Moreover, So for almost every such that . The case that is similar.
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Application to line bundles
Let be a U(1) line bundle, and let be a connection 1-form for . In this situation, is real-valued, and the covariant derivative satisfies for every section . Here are the components of the trivial connection for . If and , then for almost every , it follows from the diamagnetic inequality that
The above case is of the most physical interest. We view as Minkowski spacetime. Since the gauge group of electromagnetism is , connection 1-forms for are nothing more than the valid electromagnetic four-potentials on . If is the electromagnetic tensor, then the massless Maxwell–Klein–Gordon system for a section of are and the energy of this physical system is The diamagnetic inequality guarantees that the energy is minimized in the absence of electromagnetism, thus .[3]
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See also
- Diamagnetism – Magnetic property of ordinary materials
Citations
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