Nambu-Goldstone modes appear when a continuous symmetry is spontaneously broken.
Generally, the correspondence between continuous symmetries and conservation laws is given by Noether's theorem.
A common example is crystalline solids, which break continuous translational symmetry.
The search for continuous symmetries only intensified with the further developments of quantum field theory.
More abstractly, a charge is any generator of a continuous symmetry of the physical system under study.
In it are discussed continuous symmetries opposed to, for example, discrete symmetries.
Mathematically, continuous symmetries are described by continuous or smooth functions.
A continuous broken symmetry leads to a Goldstone boson.
In particular, dissipative systems with continuous symmetries need not have a corresponding conservation law.
And suppose that the integral is invariant under a continuous symmetry.