4
$\begingroup$

Let $u_a(x),\,a=1,2,\ldots n$ be a $n$-component field in Minkowski spacetime $x^\mu,\,\mu=0,1,2,3$ and let $u_{a,\,\mu}=\frac{du_a}{dx^\mu}$. Let us introduce two operators (we use Einstein summation convention that repeated indices are implicitly summed over) $$\hat G=\tau^\mu\,\frac{d}{dx^\mu}+\sigma_a\,\frac{\partial}{\partial u_a}+ \sigma_{a,\mu}\,\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}$$ and $$\hat N^\mu=\tau^\mu+\sigma_a\,\frac{\delta}{\delta u_{a,\,\mu}}+ \sigma_{a,\nu}\,\frac{\delta}{\delta u_{a,\,\mu\nu}},$$ where $$\sigma_a=\xi_a-\tau^\mu\,u_{a,\,\mu},$$ $\xi_a(x,u)$ and $\tau^\mu(x,u)$ do not depend on field derivatives, and $$\frac{\delta}{\delta u_{a,\,\mu}}=\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}- \frac{d}{dx^\nu}\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu\nu}},$$ $$\frac{\delta}{\delta u_{a,\,\mu\nu}}=\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu\nu}}- \frac{d}{dx^\alpha}\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu\nu\alpha}}.$$ It is claimed in http://link.springer.com/article/10.1023%2FA%3A1008240112483 (Lie–Bäcklund and Noether Symmetries with Applications, by N.H. Ibragimov, A.H. Kara and F.M. Mahomed) that $$[\hat G+\tau^\nu_{,\,\nu},\hat N^\mu]=\tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}\,\hat N^\nu. \tag{1}$$ The authors write that "the relation is proved by straightforward, albeit tedious, computation".

Is there a simpler way to prove the commutation relation (1)? I'm interested to prove it only in the first jet space $(x^\mu,u_a,u_{a,\,\nu})$, so only the first few terms from the cited article are presented in the definitions of $\hat G$ and $\hat N^\mu$.

$\endgroup$

1 Answer 1

1
$\begingroup$

Now I have found a proof. In the first jet space, it is sufficient to take $$\hat N^\mu=\tau^\mu+\sigma_a\,\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}},$$ and the proof proceeds as follows. We have \begin{equation} [\hat G+\tau^\nu_{,\,\nu},\,\hat N^\mu]=\hat G(\tau^\mu)+\hat G(\sigma_a)\, \frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}+\sigma_a\left [\hat G,\,\frac{\partial} {\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\right]+\sigma_a\left [\tau^\nu_{,\,\nu},\, \frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\right]. \tag{1} \end{equation} But \begin{equation} \left [\tau^\nu_{,\,\nu},\,\frac{\partial}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\right]= -\frac{\partial \tau^\nu_{,\,\nu}}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}=-\frac{\partial \tau^\mu}{\partial u_a}, \tag{2} \end{equation} because \begin{equation} \tau^\nu_{,\,\nu}=\frac{\partial \tau^\nu}{\partial x^\nu}+u_{b,\,\nu}\, \frac{\partial \tau^\nu}{\partial u_b}. \tag{3} \end{equation} On the other hand, as $\tau^\mu$ doesn't depend on field derivatives, \begin{equation} \hat G(\tau^\mu)=\tau^\nu\,\tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}+\sigma_a\,\frac{\partial \tau^\mu}{\partial u_a}. \tag{4} \end{equation} Further we have \begin{equation} \hat G(\sigma_a)=\tau^\nu\,\sigma_{a,\,\nu}+\sigma_b\,\frac{\partial \sigma_a}{\partial u_b}+\sigma_{b,\,\nu}\,\frac{\partial \sigma_a} {\partial u_{b,\,\nu}}. \tag{5} \end{equation} But $$\sigma_a=\xi(x,u)-\tau^\mu(x,u)\,u_{a,\,\mu},$$ and, therefore, \begin{equation} \frac{\partial \sigma_a}{\partial u_{b,\,\nu}}=-\delta_a^b\,\tau^\nu. \tag{6} \end{equation} Substituting this into (5), we get \begin{equation} \hat G(\sigma_a)=\sigma_b\,\frac{\partial \sigma_a}{\partial u_b}. \tag{7} \end{equation} It remains to calculate the commutator \begin{equation} \left [\hat G,\,\frac{\partial} {\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\right]= \left [\tau^\nu \,\frac{\partial }{\partial x^\nu}+\xi_b\,\frac{\partial } {\partial u_b}+\eta_{b\nu}\,\frac{\partial }{\partial u_{b,\,\nu}},\, \frac{\partial} {\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\right]=-\frac{\partial \eta_{b\nu}} {\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\,\frac{\partial }{\partial u_{b,\,\nu}}, \tag{8} \end{equation} where we have used the fact that $\tau^\nu$ and $\xi_a$ do not depend on field derivatives. Using $$\eta_{b\nu}=\xi_{b,\,\nu}-\tau^\alpha_{,\,\nu}\,u_{b,\,\alpha},$$ along with \begin{equation} \frac{\partial \xi_{b,\,\nu}}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}=\delta^\mu_\nu\, \frac{\partial \xi_b}{\partial u_a},\;\;\;\frac{\partial \tau^\alpha_{,\,\nu}}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}=\delta^\mu_\nu\, \frac{\partial \tau^\alpha}{\partial u_a}, \tag{9} \end{equation} we get \begin{equation} \frac{\partial \eta_{b\nu}}{\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}=\delta^\mu_\nu\,\left ( \frac{\partial \xi_b}{\partial u_a}-u_{b,\,\alpha}\,\frac{\partial \tau^\alpha}{\partial u_a}\right )-\delta_a^b\,\tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}= \delta^\mu_\nu\,\frac{\partial \sigma_b}{\partial u_a}-\delta_a^b\, \tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}. \tag{10} \end{equation} Therefore \begin{equation} \left [\hat G,\,\frac{\partial} {\partial u_{a,\,\mu}}\right]= \tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}\,\frac{\partial }{\partial u_{a,\,\nu}}- \frac{\partial \sigma_b}{\partial u_a}\,\frac{\partial } {\partial u_{b,\,\mu}}. \tag{11} \end{equation} Now (2), (4), (7) and (11), in combination with (1), imply the desired result: \begin{equation} [\hat G+\tau^\nu_{,\,\nu},\,\hat N^\mu]=\tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}\,\left (\tau^\nu+ \sigma_a\,\frac{\partial }{\partial u_{a,\,\nu}}\right )=\tau^\mu_{,\,\nu}\, \hat N^\nu. \end{equation}

$\endgroup$

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .