For the derivation of the Least Action Principle in classical field theory , what is the difference between δ and ∂?

This is one of the most important conceptual distinctions in field theory.

The symbols \partial∂ and δ\deltaδ represent completely different operations.


1. The Partial Derivative \partial

\partial∂ means:

“How does a function change as spacetime coordinates change?”

For a fieldϕ(x)=ϕ(t,x)\phi(x) = \phi(t,\mathbf x)ϕ(x)=ϕ(t,x)

the derivativeμϕ\partial_\mu \phi∂μ​ϕ

describes how the field changes from point to point in spacetime.

Examples:0ϕ=ϕt\partial_0 \phi = \frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t}∂0​ϕ=∂t∂ϕ​

(time variation)

andiϕ=ϕxi\partial_i \phi = \frac{\partial \phi}{\partial x^i}∂i​ϕ=∂xi∂ϕ​

(spatial variation)

So:=ordinary spacetime derivative\boxed{ \partial = \text{ordinary spacetime derivative} }∂=ordinary spacetime derivative​

It acts inside spacetime.


2. The Variation δ\deltaδ

δ\deltaδ means:

“Suppose I slightly deform the entire field configuration.”

This is not motion through spacetime.

Instead:ϕ(x)ϕ(x)+δϕ(x)\phi(x) \rightarrow \phi(x)+\delta\phi(x)ϕ(x)→ϕ(x)+δϕ(x)

means:

  • keep spacetime point xxx fixed
  • slightly change the value of the field there

So δϕ\delta\phiδϕ is an infinitesimal “test deformation” of the whole function.


Visual Intuition

Think of the field as a rubber sheet over spacetime.

  • ϕ\partial\phi∂ϕ:
    measures the slope of the sheet from point to point
  • δϕ\delta\phiδϕ:
    slightly lifts or perturbs the sheet itself

Why Both Appear Together

The Lagrangian depends on:L(ϕ,μϕ)\mathcal L(\phi,\partial_\mu\phi)L(ϕ,∂μ​ϕ)

meaning:

  • the field value
  • and its spacetime gradients

When varying the action:δS=δd4xL\delta S = \delta \int d^4x\,\mathcal LδS=δ∫d4xL

you must vary BOTH:δϕ\delta\phiδϕ

andδ(μϕ)\delta(\partial_\mu\phi)δ(∂μ​ϕ)

Since differentiation and variation commute:δ(μϕ)=μ(δϕ)\boxed{ \delta(\partial_\mu\phi) = \partial_\mu(\delta\phi) }δ(∂μ​ϕ)=∂μ​(δϕ)​

This relation is central to the derivation.


Deep Geometric Interpretation

\partial∂ lives within spacetime.

δ\deltaδ lives in the infinite-dimensional space of all possible field configurations.

So:

SymbolMeaningActs On
μ\partial_\mu∂μ​spacetime derivativecoordinates
δ\deltaδvariation between nearby field configurationsfunction space

Analogy with Classical Mechanics

For a particle trajectory:x(t)x(t)x(t)

we distinguish:

Velocity:dxdt\frac{dx}{dt}dtdx​

vs variation of the path:x(t)x(t)+δx(t)x(t)\rightarrow x(t)+\delta x(t)x(t)→x(t)+δx(t)

The first measures motion along the path.

The second compares neighboring possible paths.

Field theory is exactly the same idea, but with fields instead of trajectories.


The Key Philosophical Idea

The action principle says:

Nature compares all nearby possible field configurations and selects the one whereδS=0\boxed{ \delta S=0 }δS=0​

That does NOT mean the action is zero.

It means:first-order change in action vanishes\text{first-order change in action vanishes}first-order change in action vanishes

which is analogous to:dfdx=0\frac{df}{dx}=0dxdf​=0

for extrema in ordinary calculus.


The field equation emerges because the true field configuration is a stationary point in the space of all possible field configurations.