This quantum world/Feynman route/Lorentz force law
Lorentz force law
To incorporate effects on the motion of a particle (regardless of their causes), we must modify the action differential that a free particle associates with a path segment In doing so we must take care that the modified (i) remains homogeneous in the differentials and (ii) remains a 4-scalar. The most straightforward way to do this is to add a term that is not just homogeneous but linear in the coordinate differentials:
Believe it or not, all classical electromagnetic effects (as against their causes) are accounted for by this expression. is a scalar field (that is, a function of time and space coordinates that is invariant under rotations of the space coordinates), is a 3-vector field, and is a 4-vector field. We call and the scalar potential and the vector potential, respectively. The particle-specific constant is the electric charge, which determines how strongly a particle of a given species is affected by influences of the electromagnetic kind.
If a point mass is not free, the expressions at the end of the previous section give its kinetic energy and its kinetic momentum Casting (*) into the form
and plugging it into the definitions
we obtain
and are the particle's potential energy and potential momentum, respectively.
Now we plug (**) into the geodesic equation
For the right-hand side we obtain
while the left-hand side works out at
Two terms cancel out, and the final result is
As a classical object travels along the segment of a geodesic, its kinetic momentum changes by the sum of two terms, one linear in the temporal component of and one linear in the spatial component How much contributes to the change of depends on the electric field and how much contributes depends on the magnetic field The last equation is usually written in the form
called the Lorentz force law, and accompanied by the following story: there is a physical entity known as the electromagnetic field, which is present everywhere, and which exerts on a charge an electric force and a magnetic force
(Note: This form of the Lorentz force law holds in the Gaussian system of units. In the MKSA system of units the is missing.)