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In J.W. van Holten's essay Aspects of BRST Quantization ,hep-th/0201124, he begins (Section 1.1) with the free relativistic particle. In order to derive the dynamics from the action principle he introduces an auxiliary variable:
a bit later he notes
I thought I was really familiar with the relativistic free particle, but I've never encountered this einbein before. I can't make out from the rest of his discussion just why it's there. It's a constraint on the action to be sure, and that is very apposite to his future development of BRST symmetry. But why have it at all?
Anybody know?
In addition to the co-ordinates [itex]x^{mu}[/itex], the action depends on an auxiliary variable e; it reads
[tex] S[x^{\mu};e] = \frac{m}{2} \int_1^2 (\frac{1}{e} \frac{dx_{\mu}}{ed\lambda}\frac{dx^\mu}{d\lambda} - ec^2) d\lambda [/tex]
a bit later he notes
...the action is invariant under a change of parametrization of the real interval [itex]\lambda \rightarrow \lambda'(\lambda)[/itex], if the variables [itex] (x^{\mu},e)[/itex] are transformed simultaneously to [itex](x'^{\mu},e')[/itex] according to the rule
[tex]x'^{\mu}(\lambda') = x^{\mu}(\lambda), e'(\lambda')d\lambda' = e(\lambda)d\lambda [/tex]
Thus the co-ordinates [itex]x^{\mu}[/itex] transform as scalar functions on the real line [itex]\mathbf{R}^1[/itex], whilst [itex]e(\lambda)[/itex] transforms as the (single) component of a covariant vector (1-form) in one dimension. For this reason it is often called the einbein.
I thought I was really familiar with the relativistic free particle, but I've never encountered this einbein before. I can't make out from the rest of his discussion just why it's there. It's a constraint on the action to be sure, and that is very apposite to his future development of BRST symmetry. But why have it at all?
Anybody know?
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