Timm Carsten
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 66045, USA.
Phys Rev Lett. 2007 Feb 16;98(7):070604. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.98.070604. Epub 2007 Feb 15.
Systems of coupled rate equations are ubiquitous in many areas of science, for example, in the description of electronic transport through quantum dots and molecules. They can be understood as a continuity equation expressing the conservation of probability. It is shown that this conservation law can be implemented by constructing a gauge theory akin to classical electrodynamics on the network of possible states described by the rate equations. The properties of this gauge theory are analyzed. It turns out that the network is maximally connected with respect to the electromagnetic fields even if the allowed transitions form a sparse network. It is found that the numbers of degrees of freedom of the electric and magnetic fields are equal. The results shed light on the structure of classical Abelian gauge theory beyond the particular motivation in terms of rate equations.