Monday, 24 July 2017

classical mechanics - What makes a Lagrangian a Lagrangian?


I just wanted to know what the characteristic property of a Lagrangian is?


How do you see without referring to Newtonian Mechanics that it has to be $L=T-V$?


People constructed a Lagrangian in Special Relativity and General Relativity. But is there a general recipe to find a Lagrangian for a theory or is a Lagrangian just chosen so that it works out?


Of course there are some symmetry and invariance properties that play an important role there, but is it possible to put the theory of Lagrangian to a more abstract and general level so that we can say a priori how a Lagrangian for a given theory must look like?


Which information are necessary to construct a Lagrangian for a physical theory?



Answer



As far as I know there is no way of rigorously constructing a Lagrangian for a new physical theory. The point is you just have to guess a Lagrangian (i.e. construct your own theory), check all the invariance/symmetry properties you want to have and hope that the predictions your theory makes will agree with the measurements.



The hard part is guessing 'correctly' - as my professor in QFT put it: So far, that 'correct guess' happenend twice, in both cases earning the authors a Nobel Prize (QED and electroweak Lagrangian).


No comments:

Post a Comment

Understanding Stagnation point in pitot fluid

What is stagnation point in fluid mechanics. At the open end of the pitot tube the velocity of the fluid becomes zero.But that should result...