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Under a local gauge (phase?) transformation of the field operator for electrically charged fields, $\psi \rightarrow e^{\mathrm{i}\phi(x_{\mu})}\psi$, where $e^{\mathrm{i}\phi(x_{\mu})} \in U(1)$, the associated $\mathcal{L}$ remains invariant if we add an electromagnetic potential $A_{\mu}$ to it.
(If instead of performing a local gauge transformation we perform a global one, $\psi \rightarrow e^{\mathrm{i}\phi}\psi$, then no four-potential $A_{\mu}$ has to be added to the Lagrangian to keep it invariant under this transformation. This transformation is, via Noether's theorem, associated with the conservation of the number of particles (or "conservation of probability") and thus electric charge).

All neat and well. Now, look at the shifted pattern of the double-slit experiment. Can we reason in the other direction too? Can we say that if we physically make a four potential $A_{\mu}$ appear (in this case only the space part is present) appear, as in the experiment, that this causes the shift in the diffraction pattern? Does this field, which is constant, induce, indirectly, a global transformation on the pattern? Or, directly, a local gauge transformation on the electron field (states)? It looks as if the pattern is globally phase transformed. This means that the electron-field "in-between" is globally transformed too. Is the four-potential inducing phase-shifts on the electron field between slits and screen? Thereby making some paths more and some paths less probable (in the path integral formulation)? Note that the diffraction pattern moves in the other direction if the current inside the solenoid is reversed.
So it seems as if the global phase transformed pattern stands in direct relation to locally transformed electron states. Can we say these states are not gauge transformed at random (as in the mathematical procedure of imposing a local gauge transformation on the charged field which makes an $A$-field show up) but as a result of the $A$-field (which is cylindrical symmetric and constant in time)?

Or stated in still another way: can we say that instead of the fact that a local gauge transformation gives rise to an $A_{\mu}$ field the reverse holds, namely that an applied $A_{\mu}$ field gives rise to real local phase transformations? Moreover, in the face of quantum fields mapping spacetime points to operators, this doesn't seem unreasonable.

I found some new information on this subject:

4.3 The Aharonov-Bohm effect The Aharonov-Bohm effect (Aharonov and Bohm, 1959) deserves special attention since it is often considered to be an instance of the Berry phase. The scenario is very well known: a split electron beam passes around a solenoid in which a magnetic field is confined. The region outside the solenoid is field-free, but nevertheless, a shift in the interference pattern on a screen behind the solenoid can be observed upon alteration of the magnetic field. The phase shift can be calculated from the loop integral over the potential, which—due to Stokes’ theorem—relates to the magnetic flux,...etc.

More can be read here, where the Berry phase is discussed. Somehow this seemed important for this problem. I don't know exactly how though.

enter image description here

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    The AB-effect measures the phase difference between $\psi_1$ and $\psi_2$. A global transformation affects both in the same way, so the difference is unchanged. – Aron Beekman Mar 08 '21 at 04:24
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  • I don't understand why you think the constant $A_\mu$ induces a "global" transformation - the phase-shift for a particle travelling along a path $\gamma$ is $\exp(\mathrm{i}\int_\gamma A)$, i.e. it is path-dependent and certainly not global in the ordinary meaning of the word. 2. Why are you talking about a "photon field" - the AB effect affects only electrically charged particles like electrons?
  • – ACuriousMind Mar 08 '21 at 16:43
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    "associated with the conservation of the number of particles (or "conservation of probability") and thus electric charge" It is the other way around. Particle numbers are not in general conserved due to annihilation, but charge-current is. – my2cts Mar 08 '21 at 16:48
  • @ACuriousMind The four-potential appears by applying a local gauge transformation on the charged (electron) field. Can we reason in the other direction too? If we physically introduce a four-potential field (a stationary field in this case, with no associated B-field, which is why I call the gauge transformation, kind of sloppy, a global transformation), will the electron field be globally transformed insofar as its phase is concerned? Clearly, the pattern on the screen has undergone a global phase transformation. – Deschele Schilder Mar 08 '21 at 18:25
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    I'm still not sure what you mean (as I said the AB effect is manifestly path-dependent, hence not "global" in any way), or why you're talking about the electron field - the phase-shift in the AB effect acts on electron states, not on the field. As for "the 4-potential appears by applying a local gauge transformation", that's a strange claim probably related to a popular way of motivating gauge theories I talk about in https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/370783/50583. – ACuriousMind Mar 08 '21 at 18:46
  • @ACuriousMind Isn't it true that the A appears in the Lagrangian of the electron field (as an interaction term) because of the requirement that the Lagrangian of the field must be invariant upon local gauge transformation acting on the field? So conversely, can't we say that upon introducing a real A field (virtual photons though, and no E-field or B-field) the electron states are locally gauged ("re-phased"), thereby globally transforming the interference pattern? The path integral gives a mean to calculate the change in the pattern. So my question should be changed from global to local. – Deschele Schilder Mar 08 '21 at 19:34
  • @ACuriousMind I think my question is the same as asking if the fact that electrons interact must have as a consequence that virtual photons are real. And we all know how that discussion goes. – Deschele Schilder Mar 08 '21 at 19:41
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    You changed the question, asking about whether local gauge transformations are "real". Gauge transformations are by definition "just mathematical", nothing physical can ever depend on them. Everything physical is gauge invariant. The AB effect is (was) surprising and at first rejected by many, not because of involving gauge transformations (which it doesn't), but because it makes it look like the vector potential is a real, physical quantity. The electron beam passes through a region where the magnetic field $B = \nabla \times A$ is identically zero, but $A$ is not. – Aron Beekman Mar 26 '21 at 00:28
  • @AronBeekman I know what you mean, but in this case it seems as if the A-field "makes" the phase of the electron field change, just as making a local gauge transformation on a charged field makes an A-field appear (so the other way round). I'm sure I must be mistaken somehow and I thought I understood but now I'm not sure anymore. – Deschele Schilder Mar 26 '21 at 00:33
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    It's the other other way around: the $A$-field leads to a measurable phase difference (emphasis on difference) $\exp(\ti \oint A)$, and this difference you cannot "gauge away" with any transformation (try it). So the $A$-field giving rise to an AB-phase is not an $A$-field that can be "made to appear" due to a gauge transformation. It's the same for the magnetic field arising from the vector potential: it is unaffected by gauge transformations in exactly the same way as the AB-phase is, and you wouldn't say the magnetic field appears due to a gauge transformation, would you? – Aron Beekman Mar 26 '21 at 01:03
  • @AronBeekman But doesn't the electromagnetic photon field appear when one makes local gauge transformations on an electrically charged field, upon insisting that the Lagrangian of this field is invariant for such a transformation? – Deschele Schilder Mar 26 '21 at 10:26