Can (electric-magnetic) duality be gauged?

Claudio Bunster and Marc Henneaux
Phys. Rev. D 83, 045031 – Published 25 February 2011

Abstract

There exists a formulation of the Maxwell theory in terms of two vector potentials, one electric and one magnetic. The action is then manifestly invariant under electric-magnetic duality transformations, which are rotations in the two-dimensional internal space of the two potentials, and local. We ask the question: Can duality be gauged? The only known and battle-tested method of accomplishing the gauging is the Noether procedure. In its decanted form, it amounts to turning on the coupling by deforming the Abelian gauge group of the free theory, out of whose curvatures the action is built, into a non-Abelian group which becomes the gauge group of the resulting theory. In this article, we show that the method cannot be successfully implemented for electric-magnetic duality. We thus conclude that, unless a radically new idea is introduced, electric-magnetic duality cannot be gauged. The implication of this result for supergravity is briefly discussed.

  • Received 25 November 2010

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.83.045031

© 2011 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Claudio Bunster1,3 and Marc Henneaux1,2,3

  • 1Centro de Estudios Científicos (CECS), Casilla 1469, Valdivia, Chile
  • 2Université Libre de Bruxelles and International Solvay Institutes, ULB-Campus Plaine CP231, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium
  • 3Max-Planck-Institut für Gravitationsphysik (Albert-Einstein-Institut), Mühlenberg 1, D-14476 Potsdam, Germany

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Issue

Vol. 83, Iss. 4 — 15 February 2011

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