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Article

Weyl, Majorana and Dirac Fields from a Unified Perspective

1
Department of Physics, University of Basel, 4056 Basel, Switzerland
2
Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), 5232 Villigen, Switzerland; Tel.: +41-56-310-2390
Symmetry 2016, 8(9), 87; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym8090087
Submission received: 13 July 2016 / Revised: 12 August 2016 / Accepted: 24 August 2016 / Published: 30 August 2016
(This article belongs to the Special Issue CPT Symmetry)

Abstract

:
A self-contained derivation of the formalism describing Weyl, Majorana and Dirac fields from a unified perspective is given based on a concise description of the representation theory of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group. Lagrangian methods play no role in the present exposition, which covers several fundamental aspects of relativistic field theory, which are commonly not included in introductory courses when treating fermionic fields via the Dirac equation in the first place.

1. Introduction

There can be great advantages in choosing a suitable notation when formulating a theory; e.g., it is customary to denote the contravariant components of the Cartesian coordinates of an event in flat 3 + 1 -dimensional Minkowski spacetime M ( R 1 + 3 , η ) by a column four vector:
x = x 0 x 1 x 2 x 3 = c t x 1 x 2 x 3 = c t x
where the speed of light c accounts for equal physical units of the components x μ defined by the event time t = x 0 / c and the corresponding space coordinates given by a column vector x = ( x 1 , x 2 , x 3 ) T . The Lorentz-invariant Minkowski bilinear form η is then defined by:
η ( x , y ) = x μ y μ = x 0 y 0 x 1 y 1 x 2 y 2 x 3 y 3 = x T g y
with the metric tensor g = d i a g ( 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 ) . However, one could also hit upon the idea to arrange the spacetime coordinates in matrix form according to [1]:
x ̲ = x 0 + x 3 x 1 i x 2 x 1 + i x 2 x 0 x 3 .
Then, the indefinite Minkowski norm squared:
x 2 = x μ x μ = η ( x , x ) = ( x 0 ) 2 ( x 1 ) 2 ( x 2 ) 2 ( x 3 ) 2 = det x ̲
can be written in an elegant manner as a determinant. Furthermore, with:
x ¯ = x 0 x 3 x 1 + i x 2 x 1 i x 2 x 0 + x 3 = x 0 + x 3 x 1 i x 2 x 1 + i x 2 x 0 x 3
one finds a compact expression for the Minkowski scalar product:
η ( x , y ) = 1 2 tr ( x ̲ y ¯ ) .
Based on notational tricks of this kind, it is possible to derive and discuss the field equations of the fundamental fermionic fields appearing in the standard model and its modern extensions in a very elegant manner, as will be demonstrated below. Furthermore, the following discussion includes a thorough analysis of the basic properties of Weyl [2,3], Dirac [4] and Majorana [5] fields emerging from first principles, like Lorentz symmetry and causality.
In Section 2, the most relevant topological and group theoretical properties of the Lorentz group are revisited, resulting in the construction of the fundamental ray representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group in Section 3. Section 4 deals with Weyl and Majorana fields as complex two-component spinor fields. Section 5 contains a derivation of the Dirac equation and highlights some technical details, which are missing in the literature. Additionally, the equivalence between the complex two-component Majorana formalism and the real four-component Majorana formalism in a Dirac setting is established in a new explicit manner. Finally, a unified approach containing all aspects of Weyl, Majorana and Dirac fields is presented with a special focus on the emerging Majorana phase.

2. Structure of the Lorentz Group

In the following, Lorentz transformations will be interpreted as passive transformations, i.e., when an observer in the inertial system (or inertial frame of reference) IS assigns the contravariant Cartesian Minkowski coordinates x μ to an event, an observer in another inertial system IS’ with a common point of origin will assign coordinates x μ to the same event. Then, the coordinates are related by a Lorentz transformation expressed by a matrix Λ according to x = Λ x or:
x μ = Λ ν μ x ν .
Since the Minkowski metric is preserved under such transformations, one has for all x , y ( R 1 + 3 , η ) :
η ( x , y ) = x T g y = η ( Λ x , Λ y ) = x T Λ T g Λ y ,
and consequently:
Λ T g Λ = g .
Equation (9) defines the Lorentz group L (up to isomorphisms) as the indefinite orthogonal group O ( 1 , 3 ) :
L = O ( 1 , 3 ) = { Λ G L ( 4 , R ) Λ T g Λ = g } ,
where G L ( 4 , R ) denotes the multiplicative group of all invertible real 4 × 4 -matrices. Since:
det ( Λ T g Λ ) = det ( Λ T ) det ( g ) det ( Λ ) = det ( Λ ) 2 det ( g ) = det g = 1
one has det ( Λ ) = ± 1 for Λ O ( 1 , 3 ) . Considering matrices in O ( 1 , 3 ) with a positive determinant only, one obtains the subgroup:
L + = S O ( 1 , 3 ) = { Λ G L ( 4 , R ) Λ T g Λ = g , det Λ = 1 } O ( 1 , 3 ) ,
called the proper Lorentz group L + , which is (isomorphic to) the special indefinite orthogonal group S O ( 1 , 3 ) .
Representing a matrix Λ O ( 1 , 3 ) according to the decomposition:
Λ = γ a T b M ,
where γ is a real number, a and b are column vectors, and M is a 3 × 3 matrix, a short calculation using ( Λ 1 ) T = g Λ g 1 gives:
( Λ 1 ) T = γ a T b M .
Furthermore:
γ 2 b 2 = 1 , b T M = γ a T , M T M = a a T + 1 3
must hold, implying that γ = Λ 0 0 fulfills either γ 1 or γ 1 . Indeed, by the definition:
L + = S O + ( 1 , 3 ) = { Λ M a t ( 4 , R ) | Λ T g Λ = g , det Λ = 1 , Λ 0 0 1 }
a further subgroup S O + ( 1 , 3 ) S O ( 1 , 3 ) O ( 1 , 3 ) is obtained. This group, called the proper orthochronous Lorentz group, is considered to be a true (local) symmetry group of all physical laws governing quantum field theories in classical spacetimes. The larger group S O ( 1 , 3 ) includes spacetime reflections (PT) with γ 1 , and O ( 1 , 3 ) even contains parity (P) and time reversal (T) transformations, as discussed below. These transformations are not related to exact symmetries of the real world. Still, the group O ( 1 , 3 ) is relevant for theoretical considerations in quantum field theory in connection with the CPTtheorem [6].

2.1. Connected Components and Important Subgroups of the (Complex) Lorentz Group

L + is the identity component of the Lorentz group, containing the identity element denoted in the following simply by ’1’, by 1 4 , or d i a g ( 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 ) . L contains the space reflection P with det P = 1 ; L contains the time reversal T with det T = 1 :
P = 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 , T = 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 ,
L + contains the spacetime reflection P T = 1 4 with det ( P T ) = 1 . The four transformations { 1 4 , P, T, P T } constitute the discrete Klein four group V (see also Figure 1).
The so-called complex Lorentz group O ( 4 , C ) = { Λ G L ( 4 , C ) | Λ T Λ = 1 4 } consists of two connected components S O ( 4 , C ) = O + ( 4 , C ) and O ( 4 , C ) only, which can be characterized by the determinant of their elements. The identity component S O ( 4 , C ) , which contains the unimodular matrices with positive determinant, is also sometimes called the proper complex Lorentz group. One may note that the signature of the metric tensor does not play any role for the definition of the abstract group structure of the complex Lorentz group. A matrix Λ ^ O ( 1 , 3 ; C ) , which fulfills the condition Λ ^ T g Λ ^ = g involving the metric tensor g = d i a g ( 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 ) , becomes via a similarity transformation:
Λ ^ Λ = Σ Λ ^ Σ 1
using
Σ = 1 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i , Σ 1 = 1 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i
a O ( 4 , C ) -matrix, since from Σ T = Σ , ( Σ 1 ) T = Σ 1 and Σ 2 = Σ 2 = g , one has:
Λ T Λ = ( Σ Λ ^ Σ 1 ) T ( Σ Λ ^ Σ 1 ) = Σ 1 Λ ^ T Σ Σ Λ ^ Σ 1 = Σ 1 Λ ^ T g Λ ^ g Σ 1 = 1 4 ,
and therefore, Λ O ( 4 , C ) .
A continuous path γ ^ : [ 0 , π ] S O ( 1 , 3 ; C ) S O ( 4 , C ) connecting the identity element 1 4 with the spacetime reflection P T = 1 4 according to γ ^ ( 0 ) = 1 4 , γ ^ ( π ) = 1 4 , and | γ ^ | = { γ ^ ( t ) | t [ 0 , π ] } S O ( 1 , 3 ; C ) , is given by:
γ ^ ( t ) = cos t i sin t 0 0 i sin t cos t 0 0 0 0 cos t sin t 0 0 sin t cos t .
By the similarity transformation (18), the path γ ^ becomes a path γ lying completely in S O ( 4 , C ) (and even in the real group S O ( 4 ) ):
γ ( t ) = Σ γ ^ ( t ) Σ 1 = cos t sin t 0 0 sin t cos t 0 0 0 0 cos t sin t 0 0 sin t cos t .
Of course, also the pseudo-unitary group U ( 1 , 3 ) U ( 4 ) could be considered as a complex generalization of the proper Lorentz group; the corresponding group manifold would be 16-dimensional, whereas the topological dimension of the group manifold S O ( 4 , C ) is 12. U ( 1 , 3 ) is the symmetry group of a ‘Minkowski sesquilinear form’, but it turned out that the group S O ( 4 , C ) leads to more fruitful applications in quantum field theory in connection with the analytic continuation of certain theoretical constructs like, e.g., Wightman correlation distributions [7].

3. Fundamental Ray Representations of the Proper Orthochronous Lorentz Group

3.1. Explicit Construction of the Two Two-Dimensional Inequivalent Irreducible Fundamental Ray Representations

In order to construct the lowest-dimensional non-trivial irreducible representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group, one may introduce the relativistically generalized Pauli matrices:
σ μ = σ ¯ μ = ( 1 2 , σ ) = ( σ 0 , σ 1 , σ 2 , σ 3 ) , σ ¯ μ = σ μ = ( 1 2 , σ )
where the three components in σ are given by the Pauli matrices:
σ 1 = 0 1 1 0 , σ 2 = 0 i i 0 , σ 3 = 1 0 0 1 .
The symbol σ 0 used for the identity matrix 1 2 in two dimensions fits nicely into the notation used above.
Arbitrary four vectors x with contravariant components x μ = ( x 0 , x 1 , x 2 , x 3 ) are mapped by the linear bijection x x ̲ :
H e r m ( 2 , C ) x ̲ = σ μ x μ = x 0 + x 3 x 1 i x 2 x 1 + i x 2 x 0 x 3
onto the set H e r m ( 2 , C ) of Hermitian 2 × 2 matrices. The inverse mapping can be easily obtained from a generalization of the well-known trace identity:
1 2 tr ( σ i σ j ) = δ i j ,
i.e.,
1 2 tr ( σ μ σ ¯ ν ) = g μ ν .
Then, one has:
1 2 tr ( x ̲ σ ¯ μ ) = 1 2 tr ( x ν σ ν σ ¯ μ ) = x ν g ν μ = x μ
The Minkowski scalar product can be transferred from M onto H e r m ( 2 , C ) via:
det x ̲ = ( x 0 + x 3 ) ( x 0 x 3 ) ( x 1 + i x 2 ) ( x 1 i x 2 ) = ( x 0 ) 2 ( x 1 ) 2 ( x 2 ) 2 ( x 3 ) 2 = x μ x μ = x 2
and the identity:
η ( x + y , x + y ) = ( x + y , x + y ) M = ( x + y ) μ ( x + y ) μ = x 2 + y 2 + 2 x μ y μ ,
leading to:
η ( x , y ) = x μ y μ = 1 2 ( det ( x ̲ + y ̲ ) det ( x ̲ ) det ( y ̲ ) ) .
Alike, with y ¯ = σ ¯ μ y μ , one obtains the compact expression for the Minkowski scalar product:
η ( x , y ) = 1 2 tr ( x ̲ y ¯ ) .
The special linear group S L ( 2 , C ) in two complex dimensions is defined by:
S L ( 2 , C ) = { A G L ( 2 , C ) | det A = + 1 } .
Now, a handy trick relies on the possibility to act with a matrix A S L ( 2 , C ) on x ̲ H e r m ( 2 , C ) according to:
x ̲ x ̲ = A x ̲ A +
where + denotes Hermitian conjugation. Obviously, x ̲ is Hermitian again, and the Minkowski scalar product is preserved in the following sense:
det x ̲ = det ( A x ̲ A + ) = det A det x ̲ det A + = det x ̲ .
Thus, again, x ̲ can be represented by a real linear combination of generalized Pauli matrices:
x ̲ = σ μ x μ with x μ x μ = x μ x μ
and A explicitly acts as a Lorentz transformation due to:
x μ = 1 2 tr ( x ̲ σ ¯ μ ) = 1 2 tr ( A x ν σ ν A + σ ¯ μ ) = 1 2 tr ( A σ ν A + σ ¯ μ ) x ν = Λ ν μ x ν .
Since x and x are obviously related by a Lorentz transformation, one has Λ O ( 1 , 3 ) , and a closer inspection shows that Λ S O + ( 1 , 3 ) holds indeed. Actually, S L ( 2 , C ) is simply connected, as will be demonstrated later. Since the mapping λ : A Λ ( A ) is obviously continuous, it is also a homomorphism of the group S L ( 2 , C ) into the proper orthochronous Lorentz group L + = S O + ( 1 , 3 ) . Furthermore, λ is surjective, and S L ( 2 , C ) is the double universal covering group of the S O + ( 1 , 3 ) .
Mapping covariant components x μ of a four vector according to x ¯ = σ ¯ μ x μ = σ ¯ μ x μ onto H e r m ( 2 , C ) , the transformation law corresponding to Equation (34) reads: x ¯ = ( A + ) 1 x ¯ A 1 . Then, one also has:
x μ y μ = 1 2 tr ( A x ̲ A + ( A + ) 1 y ¯ A 1 ) = 1 2 tr ( A 1 A x ̲ y ¯ ) = 1 2 tr x ̲ y ¯ = x μ y μ .
To convince one’s self that the homomorphism λ is two-to-one, one observes first that two matrices ± A S L ( 2 , C ) generate the same Lorentz transformation, since A x ̲ A + = ( A ) x ̲ ( A ) + . The kernel of λ, i.e., the set of all A S L ( 2 , C ) , which fulfill the equation:
x ̲ = A x ̲ A +
for every Hermitian matrix x ̲ , can be determined by first considering the special choice:
x ̲ = 1 0 0 1 ,
which leads to the condition A = ( A + ) 1 for A k e r ( λ ) , and Equation (39) then reduces to x ̲ A A x ̲ = [ x ̲ , A ] = 0 for every Hermitian x ̲ . This implies A = α 1 2 , α C . Eventually, from the condition det A = + 1 follows A = ± 1 2 .
Aside from the important group isomorphism just found above:
L + S L ( 2 , C ) / { ± 1 } , Λ ( ± A ) x ̲ = A x ̲ A + ,
the matrices in S L ( 2 , C ) display a further interesting property. Defining the fully anti-symmetric tensor ϵ = ϵ 1 = ϵ T in two dimensions by:
ϵ = i σ 2 = 0 1 1 0 ,
a symplectic (and therefore, skew-symmetric) bilinear form u , v = v , u can be defined on two so-called spinors u and v, which are elements of the two-dimensional complex vector (or spinor) space C C 2 :
u = u 1 u 2 , v = v 1 v 2
equipped with the symplectic form · , · according to:
u , v = u 1 v 2 u 2 v 1 = u T ϵ v .
In analogy to the S O + ( 1 , 3 ) -invariance of the metric tensor g, this symplectic form is S L ( 2 , C ) -invariant:
u , v = u T ϵ v = A u , A v = u T A T ϵ A v .
This can be easily demonstrated by a short calculation. With:
A = a 1 1 a 2 1 a 1 2 a 2 2 , where det A = a 1 1 a 2 2 a 2 1 a 1 2 ,
one has:
A T ϵ A = a 1 1 a 1 2 a 2 1 a 2 2 0 1 1 0 a 1 1 a 2 1 a 1 2 a 2 2 =
a 1 1 a 1 2 a 2 1 a 2 2 a 1 2 a 2 2 a 1 1 a 2 1 = 0 det A det A 0 = 0 1 1 0 ,
such that a further group isomorphism is established:
L + S p ( 2 , C ) / { ± 1 } , S L ( 2 , C ) S p ( 2 , C ) .
S p ( 2 , C ) is the complex symplectic group in two dimensions:
S p ( 2 , C ) = { A G L ( 2 , C ) | A T ϵ A = ϵ } .
The accidental isomorphism S O ( 3 , C ) L + is mentioned here without proof for the sake of completeness.
To sum up, the trick expressed by Equation (34) serves to construct a real linear representation of the Lie group S L ( 2 , C ) by the Lie group S O + ( 1 , 3 ) with the defining property for representations:
Λ ( A 1 ) Λ ( A 2 ) = Λ ( A 1 A 2 ) .
Equation (49) can be inverted up to a sign, and in a loose style, one may write A ( Λ 1 Λ 2 ) = ± A ( Λ 1 ) A ( Λ 2 ) , i.e., also a two-valued ray representation of the Lorentz group L + has been found.
The inversion of Equation (37), which fails for some Λ for topological reasons, reads:
A = ± Λ ν μ σ μ σ ¯ ν det ( Λ ν μ σ μ σ ¯ ν ) .
The derivation of Equation (50) is left to the reader as an exercise.
One may ask whether the two-valued ray representation of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group or the representation of the S L ( 2 , C ) by itself is equivalent to the complex conjugate representation. It turns out that no matrix B exists, such that for all A S L ( 2 , C ) :
A * = B A B 1
holds. However, restricting our considerations to the S L ( 2 , C ) -subgroup:
S U ( 2 ) = { U G L ( 2 , C ) | U + = U 1 , det U = 1 } S L ( 2 , C ) ,
the situation is different, because a special unitary matrix U S U ( 2 ) given by:
U = a b b * a * = ( U 1 ) + , det U = a a * + b b * = 1
is related to its complex conjugate matrix U * by a similarity transformation expressed by the help of the anti-symmetric tensor ϵ = i σ 2 :
ϵ U ϵ 1 = 0 1 1 0 a b b * a * 0 1 1 0 = a * b * b a = U * .
Therewith, the ray representation of the rotation group S O ( 3 ) by the special unitary group S U ( 2 ) , obtained from the restriction of the S L ( 2 , C ) representation constructed above via the trick in Equation (34) to the subgroup S U ( 2 ) , turns out to be equivalent to its complex conjugate representation. The S U ( 2 ) matrices in the S L ( 2 , C ) generate spatial rotations; Hermitian matrices in the S L ( 2 , C ) generate the boosts.
We will denote the fundamental representation of the spinor Lorentz group S L ( 2 , C ) by itself as the ( 1 2 , 0 ) -representation and its complex conjugate representation ( 1 2 , 0 ) * as the ( 0 , 1 2 ) -representation. The trivial irreducible representation is the ( 0 , 0 ) -representation.

3.2. Wigner Boosts

A Wigner boost is a proper orthochronous Lorentz transformation, which transforms a given four vector q into another four vector p. For illustrative purposes only, the special case with m > 0 :
q = m 0 0 0 W i g n e r b o o s t p = p 0 p 1 p 2 p 3
shall be investigated here. Since q is a future-directed, timelike vector, p is also contained in the open forward light-cone, and one has p 2 = p 0 2 | p | 2 = m 2 > 0 and p 0 = p 0 m > 0 .
With q ̲ = σ μ q μ = m 1 2 and:
A W = p ̲ / m = 1 m p 0 1 2 + σ · p
= ± 1 2 m [ ( p 0 + | p | + p 0 | p | ) 1 2 + ( p 0 + | p | p 0 | p | ) σ · p | p | ] ,
a Wigner boost is given, since:
A W q ̲ A W + = m A W A W + = m p ̲ / m 2 = p ̲ .
The explicit expression for the square root in Equation (56) can be easily verified by a short calculation. For m = 0 , the expression becomes useless, signaling fundamental differences between the physics of massive and massless particles.

3.3. Topology of the S L ( 2 , C ) Group Manifold

An invertible matrix A G L ( n , C ) possesses the polar decomposition:
A = H · U ,
where H = H + H e r m ( n , C ) is a positive definite Hermitian matrix and U = ( U 1 ) + U ( n ) is unitary. For A G L ( 1 , C ) = C ˙ , the polar decomposition reduces to the well-known form:
z = H · e i φ , 0 < H R + , e i φ U ( 1 ) .
Singular matrices can be represented by the product of a unitary and a positive semi-definite Hermitian matrix.
The existence of the polar decomposition for matrices follows from the observation that the matrix H ˜ = A A + is Hermitian, since ( A A + ) + = A + + A + = A A + . Obviously, H ˜ is also invertible when A is invertible. If v is an eigenvector of A A + with a corresponding eigenvalue λ, then due to Hermiticity, λ is real, and from:
λ v + v = v + A A + v = ( A + v ) + ( A + v ) 0
one even has λ > 0 . Since det A 0 , λ 1 , , n > 0 holds for all n eigenvalues λ 1 , λ n of A A + .
Diagonalizing A A + by a unitary matrix U ˜ U ( n ) leads to the real diagonal matrix:
D = U ˜ H ˜ U ˜ 1 = λ 1 0 ̲ 0 ̲ λ n ,
accordingly H ˜ = U ˜ 1 D U ˜ also holds. Now, choosing H and U as follows:
H = U ˜ 1 D U ˜ , U = H 1 A , D = λ 1 0 ̲ 0 ̲ λ n
directly leads to the desired polar decomposition, since H + = U ˜ + D ( U ˜ 1 ) + = H is Hermitian and U is unitary because of:
U U + = H 1 A A + ( H 1 ) + = U ˜ 1 D 1 U ˜ H 1 · U ˜ 1 D U ˜ A A + = H ˜ · U ˜ 1 D 1 U ˜ ( H 1 ) + = 1 n .
For the special case A S L ( 2 , C ) G L ( 2 , C ) follows a unique decomposition with det H = 1 and U S U ( 2 ) , since:
det A = 1 = det H = λ 1 · λ 2 R + · det U | det U | = 1 det H = 1 , U S U ( 2 ) .
The representation:
H = h μ σ μ , det H = h μ h μ = h 0 2 h 2 = 1 ,
where h R 3 can be chosen in an arbitrary manner, implies h 0 2 = 1 + h 2 0 . Furthermore, h 0 is fully determined by h since 2 h 0 = tr H = λ 1 + λ 2 0 , i.e.,
h 0 = 1 + h 2 ,
implying the homeomorphism:
S L ( 2 , C ) R 3 × S 3 ,
since S U ( 2 ) S 3 . Since both manifolds R 3 and S 3 are simply connected, the same observation follows for the group manifold S L ( 2 , C ) as a topological product space. Whereas the group manifold of the S U ( 2 ) is homeomorphic to the compact three-dimensional sphere S 3 , the Lorentz group manifold is non-compact due to the non-compact factor R 3 in Equation (67). Is is assumed here that the reader is well acquainted with the basic topological facts concerning the manifolds and matrix Lie groups equipped with their standard topologies discussed so far.
All four components of the Lorentz group O ( 1 , 3 ) like the S O + ( 1 , 3 ) are not simply connected, but the covering group S L ( 2 , C ) of S O + ( 1 , 3 ) is. This topological difference and the related two-to-one surjective homomorphism of the S L ( 2 , C ) onto the proper orthochronous Lorentz group discussed above is the origin of spinor physics, a fact that is deeply related to Wigner’s theorem where physical states are related to rays in a Hilbert space [8]. However, we will not dwell any further on the specific aspects of Wigner’s theorem in this paper.

4. Spin- 1 2 : Two-Component Spinor Wave Equations

4.1. Weyl Equations

Remembering the Wigner trick (25) relying on the bijection:
M x x ̲ = σ μ x μ H e r m ( 2 , C )
and the transformation (34):
x ̲ = ( ± A ) x ̲ ( ± A + ) = A σ μ x μ A + = A σ μ A + x μ = σ μ x μ = σ μ Λ ν μ x ν = σ ν Λ μ ν x μ ,
we now use the fact that a two-to-one correspondence Λ ( ± A ) ± A ( Λ ) exists between proper orthochronous Lorentz transformations Λ S O + ( 1 , 3 ) = L + and two corresponding elements ± A of the special linear group S L ( 2 , C ) in order to construct the most fundamental spinor wave equations.
Obviously, Equation (69) implies:
A σ μ A + = σ ν Λ μ ν .
In analogy to the construction given by Equation (25), one defines the matrix-valued differential operator [9]:
̲ = σ μ μ = 0 + 3 1 i 2 1 + i 2 0 3 , i 2 = 1 ;
e.g., this operator can act by a formal matrix multiplication from the left on a two-component wave function:
ψ ( x ) = ψ 1 ( x ) ψ 2 ( x ) C 2 ,
explicitly:
0 + 3 1 i 2 1 + i 2 0 3 ψ 1 ψ 2 = 0 ψ 1 + 3 ψ 1 + 1 ψ 2 i 2 ψ 2 0 ψ 2 3 ψ 2 + 1 ψ 1 + i 2 ψ 1 .
Ignoring the trivial case where the two components of the wave function individually behave as scalar wave functions:
ψ ( x ) = ψ 1 ( x ) ψ 2 ( x ) = ψ ( x ) = ψ 1 ( x ) ψ 2 ( x ) ,
the spinor components of the wave function ψ ( x ) passively transform equivalently to a irreducible fundamental ray transformation ( 1 2 , 0 ) or ( 0 , 1 2 ) in the following sense:
( 1 2 , 0 ) : ψ ( x ) ψ ( x ) = S A ( Λ ) S 1 ψ ( x ) = S A ( Λ ) S 1 ψ ( Λ 1 x )
or:
( 0 , 1 2 ) = ( 1 2 , 0 ) * : ψ ( x ) ψ ( x ) = S A * ( Λ ) S 1 ψ ( x ) ,
with fixed invertible matrices S , S G L ( 2 , C ) , such that one has of course S A S 1 S L ( 2 , C ) S A * S 1 , since det ( S A S 1 ) = det A = det ( S A * S 1 ) .
An observer in an inertial system IS’ using coordinates x μ will use the operator (71) according to ̲ = σ μ μ . With Equation (70), one immediately notes the corresponding transformation law:
̲ = σ μ μ = σ μ Λ ν μ ν = σ ν Λ μ ν μ = A σ μ A + μ = A σ μ μ A + = A ̲ A + .
The following simple differential equation for a two-component, necessarily complex spinor wave function ψ ( x ) :
̲ ψ ( x ) = 0
shall serve now as a first ansatz for a relativistically invariant wave equation. In this context, relativistic invariance means that the wave Equation (78) holds in all inertial systems, a fact that is readily verified. From ̲ ψ ( x ) = 0 trivially follows A ̲ ψ ( x ) = 0 . Here, A is an S L ( 2 , C ) -matrix associated with a Lorentz transformation Λ. In wise foresight, one requests that ψ ( x ) obeys the manifestly covariant transformation law in accordance with Equation (76):
ψ ( x ) = ϵ A * ϵ 1 ψ ( Λ 1 x ) , ϵ = i σ 2 = 0 1 1 0 .
The special property of the matrix A S L ( 2 , C ) = S p ( 2 , C ) :
A T ϵ A = ϵ
implies:
( A T ) 1 = ϵ A ϵ 1 , ( A + ) 1 = ( A 1 ) + = ϵ A * ϵ 1 ,
hence:
0 = A ̲ ψ ( x ) = A ̲ A + ( A + ) 1 1 2 ψ ( x ) = A ̲ A + ̲ ϵ A * ϵ 1 ψ ( x ) ψ ( x ) = ̲ ψ ( x ) .
Obviously, the ‘natural law’ ̲ ψ = 0 is valid in a manifestly Lorentz-invariant form in every inertial system. Manifest Lorentz invariance of a formalism provides great advantages from the calculational point of view, but this certainly does not imply that more involved formalisms depending on a specific frame of reference may play a role in theoretical physics.
Spinors transforming according to Equation (76) are called left-chiral spinors. One has to mention that this chirality (from the Greek χ ε ι ρ , ‘hand’) should not be confused with the helicity (from the Greek ε λ ι ξ , the ‘twisted’) of the particles described by the wave functions discussed here. Helicity is defined via the direction of the momentum and the angular momentum of a particle, and it is not a Lorentz-invariant property for massive particles. In the massless case, however, helicity can be linked directly to chirality.
In the non-interacting case, a spinor ψ L ( x ) as in Equation (82) obeys the so-called left-chiral Weyl equation:
̲ ψ L ( x ) = ( σ 0 0 σ · ) ψ L ( x ) = 0 ,
which has been put in a form explicitly containing the nabla operator:
= / x 1 / x 2 / x 3 = 1 2 3 .
Of course, the right-chiral case is missing so far in the present discussion. Therefore, one considers the operator:
¯ = σ ¯ μ μ = ϵ ̲ T ϵ 1 = σ 0 0 + σ · = σ ¯ μ + μ = 0 3 1 + i 2 1 i 2 0 + 3 ,
where the easily-verifiable identities ϵ σ ϵ 1 = σ T = σ * have been used. Then, the right-chiral Weyl equation for a right-chiral spinor ψ R reads:
¯ ψ R ( x ) = ( σ 0 0 + σ · ) ψ R ( x ) = 0 ,
and again, one can check for the manifest Lorentz invariance of this equation. The transformation law (77) implies for the operator ¯ the transformation law:
¯ = ϵ [ A ̲ A + ] T ϵ 1 = ϵ A * ϵ 1 ( A + ) 1 ϵ ̲ T ϵ 1 ϵ A T ϵ 1 A 1 = ( A + ) 1 ¯ A 1 ,
and postulating the simple transformation law corresponding to the right-chiral ( 0 , 1 2 ) -representation for the right-chiral field ψ R ( x ) :
ψ ( x ) = A ψ ( x )
directly leads to the desired result:
¯ ψ ( x ) = ( A + ) 1 ¯ A 1 A ψ R ( x ) = ( A + ) 1 ¯ ψ R ( x ) = 0 .
Together, the operators ̲ and ¯ possess the interesting property:
̲ ¯ = ¯ ̲ = 0 3 1 + i 2 1 i 2 0 + 3 0 + 3 1 i 2 1 + i 2 0 3
= 0 2 1 2 2 2 3 2 0 0 0 2 1 2 2 2 3 2 = 0 0 ,
which can be expressed in a more elegant manner by exploiting the analytic symmetry μ ν = ν μ for functions of class C 2 :
̲ ¯ = σ μ μ σ ¯ ν ν = 1 2 ( σ μ σ ¯ ν + σ ν σ ¯ μ ) μ ν = g μ ν μ ν σ 0 = 1 2 .
Equation (91) implies that both field components of a left- or right-chiral Weyl field fulfill the Klein–Gordon equation. From a group theoretical perspective, the differential operators ̲ and ¯ are of a more fundamental significance than the wave operator □, since the two two-component spinor operators, which are related to the ( 1 / 2 , 0 ) - and ( 0 , 1 / 2 ) -representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group, allow for the construction of the wave equation for higher-spin fields with more involved transformation properties. The Klein–Gordon wave operator, which is linked to the trivial representation of the Lorentz group, does not contain this group theoretical information.
The Weyl equations do not describe a parity invariant world. Introducing a passive parity transformation:
Λ P : ( x 0 , x ) ( x 0 , x ) = ( x 0 , x ) , S O + ( 1 , 3 ) Λ P O ( 1 , 3 )
and considering an observer describing the dynamics of a Weyl field by ψ ( x ) and a point reflected observer describing the same Weyl field in ‘his own words’ by ψ ( x ) , one must have a linear transformation law connecting the mathematical entities used by the two observers:
ψ ( x ) = A P ψ ( x ) = A P ψ ( x 0 , x )
with an appropriate 2 × 2 -matrix A P , which makes it possible to translate theoretical or experimental aspects related to the Weyl field from one observer to the other. It is a simple exercise to show that no matrix A P exists, such that both ψ ( x ) and ψ ( x ) fulfill the left-chiral (or right-chiral) Weyl equation at the same time. In fact, a parity transformation transforms a left-chiral field into a right-chiral field and vice versa. Of course one may wonder how it is possible to mirror an observer. Anyway, it is much easier to boost or to rotate a person or a measuring device.

4.2. Two-Component Majorana Equations

The Weyl equations suffer from the disadvantage that they do not describe massive particles. Modifying, e.g., the left-chiral Weyl equation by a naive mass term according to:
̲ ψ ( x ) + m ^ ψ ( x ) = 0 , m ^ M a t ( 2 , C ) \ O 2
with an arbitrary, but non-vanishing 2 × 2 mass matrix m ^ , the wave equation turns out to be non-Lorentz invariant. A solution ψ ( x ) of the left-chiral Weyl equation in an inertial system IS’ does not fulfill the Weyl equation in a different inertial system IS since:
̲ ψ ( x ) + m ^ ψ ( x ) = A ̲ ψ ( x ) + m ^ ϵ A * ϵ 1 ψ ( x ) 0 .
In 1937, Ettore Majorana found an unconventional way out of this disturbing situation by coupling a field with its complex conjugate field [5]. The left-chiral Majorana equation:
̲ ψ ( x ) + η m ϵ 1 ψ ( x ) * = 0 , η U ( 1 ) , m R ,
obeys the desired transformation law,
̲ ψ ( x ) + η m ϵ 1 ψ ( x ) * = A ̲ ψ ( x ) + η m ϵ 1 ϵ A ϵ 1 ψ ( x ) * ψ ( x ) * = A ( ̲ ψ ( x ) + η m ϵ 1 ψ ( x ) * ) = 0 .
The mass term m must be a scalar in order to commute with every possible spinor Lorentz transformation matrix A in Equation (97).
In complete analogy to the considerations above, one may write down the right-chiral Majorana equation. Since the mass term can be equipped with a so-called Majorana phase in both the left- and the right-chiral case, it is common usage in the literature to formulate the field equations and the corresponding transformation laws with:
ϵ 1 = i σ 2 = 0 1 1 0
in the following manner ( m L , R R , | η | = 1 ):
i σ μ μ ψ L ( x ) η L m L ( i σ 2 ) ψ L ( x ) * = 0 , ψ L ( x ) = ϵ A * ϵ 1 ψ L ( Λ 1 x ) ,
i σ ¯ μ μ ψ R ( x ) + η R m R ( i σ 2 ) ψ R ( x ) * = 0 , ψ R ( x ) = A ψ R ( Λ 1 x ) .
Majorana fields play an important role as fundamental theoretical building blocks in supersymmetric quantum field theories.
In the non-interacting case, the phases η L , R have no physical significance and can be removed by a redefinition of the fields by the help of a global gauge transformation. With ψ L ( x ) ψ L ( x ) = ψ L ( x ) e i δ L / 2 and η L = e i δ L , one has, e.g., in the left-chiral case:
i ( σ 0 0 σ · ) ψ L ( x ) η L m L ϵ ψ L ( x ) * = i ( σ 0 0 σ · ) e i δ L / 2 ψ L ( x ) e i δ L m L ϵ e i δ L / 2 ψ L ( x ) *
= e i δ L / 2 [ i ( σ 0 0 σ · ) ψ L ( x ) m L ϵ ψ L ( x ) * ] = 0 ,
i.e., ψ L ( x ) fulfills a phase-free Majorana equation.
For left-handed Majorana particles, one obviously has, due to ψ L ( x ) = 0 :
i ψ ˙ L , 1 ( x ) = η L m L ψ L , 2 * ( x ) , i ψ ˙ L , 2 ( x ) = η L m L ψ L , 1 * ( x ) .
Differentiating the left equation above with respect to time and using the complex conjugate equation at the right, ψ ˙ L , 2 * = i η L * m L ψ L , 1 , leads to:
ψ ¨ L , 1 ( x ) = i η m L ψ ˙ L , 2 * ( x ) = | η L | 2 m L 2 ψ L , 1 ( x ) = m 2 ψ L , 1 ( x ) .
Therefore, ψ L , 1 is a linear combination of e i m x 0 - and e + i m x 0 -terms, and particles with their spin directed parallel or anti-parallel to the three- or (z-) axis are described by the wave functions ( ψ 2 = i m η ψ ˙ 1 * ):
ψ L , + 1 2 ( x ) = 1 0 e i m x 0 + η 0 1 e + i m x 0 ,
ψ L , 1 2 ( x ) = 0 1 e i m x 0 + η 1 0 e + i m x 0 .
The wave functions given by Equations (104) and (105) can be sped up, e.g., by Wigner boosts. Both the left- and the right-chiral Majorana fields ψ L , R describe one species of particles in the following sense: all plane wave solutions of the corresponding left- or right-chiral Majorana equations can be transformed into each other by appropriate Poincaré transformations, i.e., by Lorentz transformations and spacetime translations. Starting from the idealized, improper state of a particle at rest with a given spin direction, all other states of the particle with sharp momentum can be generated by boosts and rotations.

5. Spin- 1 2 : Four-Component Complex and Real Spinor Wave Equations

5.1. Dirac Equation

A left-chiral two-component spin- 1 2 field obeying the transformation law ψ L ( x ) = ϵ A * ϵ 1 ψ L ( x ) can be coupled to a right-chiral field with transformation law ψ R ( x ) = A ψ R ( x ) , and vice versa, with a coupling strength expressed by a mass term m according to:
( σ 0 0 σ · ) ψ L ( x ) + i m ψ R ( x ) = 0 ,
( σ 0 0 + σ · ) ψ R ( x ) + i m ψ L ( x ) = 0 .
The coupled system of Equations (106) and (107) is manifestly Lorentz invariant, since:
̲ ψ L ( x ) + i m ψ R ( x ) = A ̲ ψ L ( x ) + i m A ψ R ( x ) = A ( ̲ ψ L ( x ) + i m ψ R ( x ) ) = 0 ,
¯ ψ R ( x ) + i m ψ L ( x ) = ( A + ) 1 ¯ ψ R ( x ) + i m ϵ A * ϵ 1 ψ L ( x ) = ( A + ) 1 ( ¯ ψ R ( x ) + i m ψ L ( x ) ) = 0 .
Casting the Equations (106) and (107) into the form:
i 0 σ 0 0 σ · σ 0 0 + σ · 0 ψ R ( x ) ψ L ( x ) m 0 0 m ψ R ( x ) ψ L ( x ) = 0
and introducing the so-called gamma matrices in chiral representation:
γ ˜ 0 = γ ˜ 0 = 0 1 2 1 2 0 , γ ˜ k = γ ˜ k = 0 σ k σ k 0 , k = 1 , 2 , 3 ,
one obtains the Dirac equation in its chiral representation:
i γ ˜ μ μ Ψ ( x ) m Ψ ( x ) = 0 ,
with:
Ψ ( x ) = ψ R ( x ) ψ L ( x ) , γ ˜ μ = 0 σ μ σ ¯ μ 0 .
It is straightforward to check that the gamma matrices fulfill the anti-commutation relations:
{ γ ˜ μ , γ ˜ ν } = γ ˜ μ γ ˜ ν + γ ˜ ν γ ˜ μ = 2 g μ ν 1 4 ,
e.g., one has
( γ ˜ 1 ) 2 = 0 σ 1 σ 1 0 0 σ 1 σ 1 0 = 1 2 O 2 O 2 1 2 = 1 4 .
Historically, the relations (114) were found in 1928 by Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac in his ansatz [4] to ‘linearize’ the Klein–Gordon equation according to:
( + m 2 ) φ ( x ) ( i γ ν ν m ) ( i γ μ μ m ) Ψ ( x ) = ( γ ν γ μ ν μ + m 2 ) Ψ ( x ) = 0 ,
which led him to conditions for the coefficients γ μ = g μ ν γ ν :
= γ ν γ μ ν μ = 1 2 ( γ μ γ ν + γ ν γ μ ) μ ν = 1 2 { γ μ , γ ν } μ ν = g μ ν μ ν
enforcing the introduction of a Clifford algebra of gamma matrices γ 0 , γ 1 , γ 2 and γ 3 , which can be represented in the lowest-dimensional case by 4 × 4 -matrices.
It turns out that the gamma matrices can be represented in different ways. The anti-commutation relations (114) are invariant with respect to a similarity transformation with a non-singular matrix in G L ( 4 , C ) and, apart from the chiral representation the literature, tends to use a standard representation with matrices γ μ called the Dirac representation, which is linked to the chiral representation by:
γ ˜ μ = U γ D i r a c μ U 1 , U = 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 , U 1 = U + .
In the sequel, chiral gamma matrices shall be denoted by γ ˜ μ and (standard) Dirac matrices by γ μ . The standard Dirac matrices are explicitly given by:
γ 0 = 1 2 0 0 1 2 = σ 0 0 0 σ 0 , γ k = 0 σ k σ k 0 ,
and for many purposes, it is convenient to define a matrix γ 5 in a representation-independent manner:
γ 5 = γ 5 = i γ 0 γ 1 γ 2 γ 3 .
It is well-known that the solutions of the Dirac equation describe spin- 1 2 particles together with their antiparticles with the same mass. The Dirac matrices γ μ are especially well-suited for investigations of the low-energy limit of the Dirac equation.
The matrix U in Equation (118) is unitary; as a matter of fact, all representations of the gamma matrices that are unitarily equivalent to the chiral or Dirac representation exhibit the following (anti-) Hermiticity relations:
γ 0 γ μ γ 0 = γ μ + ,
respectively:
γ 0 + = γ 0 , γ k + = γ k ,
which provide some advantages for the discussion of energy and momentum observables.
An important result of the theory of Clifford algebras states that each set of four 4 × 4 -matrices fulfilling the anticommutation relations (114) can be brought into the chiral or Dirac form by a similarity transformation of the kind (118), where U is invertible, but not necessarily unitary. This nice feature enables theoretical physicists working in different solar systems to compare their calculations by some simple conversions. In this sense, the Dirac equation is universal.
Applying a similarity transformation to the Dirac matrices according to:
γ ^ μ = B γ μ B 1 { γ ^ μ , γ ^ ν } = B γ μ B 1 B γ ν B 1 + B γ ν B 1 B γ μ B 1 = B { γ μ , γ ν } B 1 = 2 g μ ν 1 4
with an invertible matrix B, then the transformed Dirac spinor Ψ ^ = B Ψ fulfills the Dirac equation with the new gamma matrices γ ^ μ again, since from ( i γ μ μ m ) Ψ ( x ) = 0 follows:
( i γ ^ μ μ m ) Ψ ^ ( x ) = ( i B γ μ B 1 μ m ) B Ψ ( x ) = B ( i γ μ μ m ) Ψ ( x ) = 0 .
From now on, spacetime arguments will be omitted for the sake of notational brevity. In Equations (106) and (107), solely one single real mass term coupling a left- and a right-chiral two-component field shows up. Indeed, a more general ansatz:
i ̲ ψ L m ˜ D , R ψ R = 0 ,
i ¯ ψ R m ˜ D , L ψ L = 0
with complex chiral mass terms m ˜ D , R and m ˜ D , L is conceivable. Acting with the operator i ¯ on Equation (125) and using Equation (126) yields:
¯ ̲ ψ L + i m ˜ D , R ¯ ψ R = ψ L + m ˜ D , R m ˜ D , L ψ L = 0 .
Hence, the left-chiral part ψ L respects a Klein–Gordon-type equation, and the same follows in complete analogy for the right-chiral part ψ R + m ˜ D , R m ˜ D , L ψ R = 0 . However, for the correct energy-momentum relation to hold true, one must require:
m ˜ D , R m ˜ D , L = m 2 0 .
The degenerate case m 2 = 0 is not particularly interesting; e.g., for:
i ̲ ψ L = 0 , i ¯ ψ R m ˜ ψ L = 0
with m ˜ 0 follows ψ R = ψ L = 0 and ψ L = i m ˜ 1 ¯ ψ R ; therefore, ψ L is determined by the massless field ψ R . Writing the mass terms for m 2 > 0 in polar form:
m ˜ D , R = m D , R e + i φ D , R , m ˜ D , L = m D , L e + i φ D , L = m D , L e i φ D , R = m D , L e i φ D
with m D , R , m D , L > 0 and φ D , R = φ D , L = φ D ( π , π ] , the ansätze (125) and (126) can be written as:
i ̲ ψ L m D , R m D , L e + i φ D m D , R m D , L ψ R = 0 ,
i ¯ m D , R m D , L ψ R m D , L m D , L e i φ D m D , R m D , L ψ L = 0 .
Rescaling the right-chiral field:
ψ R = m D , R m D , L ψ R
and introducing a Dirac mass term m D = m D , R m D , L finally yields the Dirac equation involving a single Dirac phase φ D :
i ̲ ψ L m D e + i φ D ψ R = 0 ,
i ¯ ψ R m D e i φ D ψ L = 0 .
Only one real mass term m D is relevant for the present theory from the physical point of view. Of course, one may argue about the physical relevance of parameters in non-interacting theories. Eventually, the phase factors e ± i φ D can be trivially eliminated by a chiral phase transformation:
Γ L α : ψ L ψ ˜ L = ψ L e i α , ψ R ψ ˜ R = ψ R ,
with α = φ D or:
Γ R β : ψ L ψ ˜ L = ψ L , ψ R ψ ˜ R = ψ R e i β
with β = φ D , so that the fields ψ ˜ L , R fulfill the phase-free Dirac equation:
i ̲ ψ ˜ L ( x ) m D ψ ˜ R = 0 ,
i ¯ ψ ˜ R ( x ) m D ψ ˜ L = 0 .
These phase transformations do not represent a gauge transformation of the four-component Dirac spinor, merely one has to state that the same physical information is encoded in the fields ψ ˜ L , R as in ψ L and ψ R . Thus, the transformation trick above does not imply that phases in interacting theories are not related to measurable quantities. A gauge transformation:
Γ α = Γ L α Γ R α : ψ L , R e i α ψ L , R
would leave e i φ D unchanged.
Actually, purely imaginary representations of the gamma matrices, which are unitarily equivalent to the standard Dirac matrices, exist. Using such matrices in a so-called Majorana representation, the Dirac equation becomes a purely real differential equation.

5.2. Real Four-Component Majorana Equation

Decomposing the two complex components of a left-chiral spinor according to:
ψ L = ψ 1 ψ 2 = Ψ 1 + i Ψ 2 Ψ 3 + i Ψ 4 , Ψ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 R ,
one obtains from the two-component Majorana equation (for the sake of simplicity, a trivial Majorana phase, such that η L = 1 shall be used for the forthcoming considerations):
i σ μ μ ψ L m ( i σ 2 ) ψ L * = i 0 + 3 1 i 2 1 + i 2 0 3 Ψ 1 + i Ψ 2 Ψ 3 + i Ψ 4 i m i Ψ 3 Ψ 4 + i Ψ 1 + Ψ 2 = 0
after a separation into real and imaginary parts, the real linear system of first order differential equations:
1 Ψ 2 + 2 Ψ 1 + 0 Ψ 4 3 Ψ 4 m Ψ 1 = 0 ,
1 Ψ 1 2 Ψ 2 + 0 Ψ 3 3 Ψ 3 m Ψ 2 = 0 ,
0 Ψ 2 + 3 Ψ 2 2 Ψ 3 + 1 Ψ 4 + m Ψ 3 = 0 ,
0 Ψ 1 + 3 Ψ 1 + 1 Ψ 3 + 2 Ψ 4 + m Ψ 4 = 0 ,
or:
2 1 0 0 3 1 2 0 3 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 3 0 1 2 Ψ 1 Ψ 2 Ψ 3 Ψ 4 m Ψ 1 Ψ 2 Ψ 3 Ψ 4 = 0 .
By the help of the purely imaginary Majorana (gamma) matrices ( γ μ M = g μ ν γ M ν ):
γ 0 M = 0 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 0 , γ 1 M = 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 ,
γ 2 M = i 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i , γ 3 M = 0 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 0 ,
Equation (147) can be cast into the Dirac equation form ( i γ μ M μ m ) Ψ M = 0 with a Majorana spinor Ψ M = ( Ψ 1 , Ψ 2 , Ψ 3 , Ψ 4 ) T , rendering the Dirac equation a real differential equation. It is readily verified that the γ M -Majorana matrices in the representation (148) above obey the mandatory anticommutation relations { γ μ M , γ ν M } = 2 g μ ν 1 4 .
Furthermore, restricting the spinor components of Ψ M according to the original construction premised by Equation (141) to real values only, the four-component Majorana equation ( i γ μ M μ m ) Ψ M = 0 is completely equivalent to the two-component Majorana equation, and again, it describes (after second quantization) the dynamics of neutral spin- 1 2 particles. However, abandoning the requirement Ψ M = Ψ M * , the number of the degrees of freedom described by the four-spinor doubles, one is lead back to the theory describing two spin- 1 2 -(anti)particles through the Dirac equation.
A further, purely imaginary representation of the Majorana matrices spread in the literature is given by:
γ ˜ M 0 = 0 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 0 = 0 σ 2 σ 2 0 , γ ˜ M 1 = i 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 i = i σ 3 0 0 σ 3 ,
γ ˜ M 2 = 0 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 0 = 0 σ 2 σ 2 0 , γ ˜ M 3 = 0 i 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 0 0 i 0 0 i 0 = i σ 1 0 0 σ 1 .
This representation can be obtained from the original representation (148) by the unitary transformation:
γ ˜ M μ = U ˜ γ M μ U ˜ 1 , U ˜ = 1 2 + 1 + 1 + 1 1 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 1 + 1 + 1 1 + 1 + 1 O ( 4 ) U ( 4 )
where det ( U ˜ ) = 1 .
The four-component spinor appearing in Equation (147) is real by definition, a fact that can be expressed by the condition Ψ M = Ψ M * . Therefore, complex conjugation can be interpreted as a charge conjugation operator, and the condition Ψ M * = Ψ M simply expresses the fact that a neutral Majorana particle is invariant under charge conjugation. Applying a unitary similarity transformation on the Majorana matrices and the Majorana spinor according to Equation (123):
γ ^ μ M = U γ μ M U 1 , Ψ ^ M = U Ψ M , U 1 = U + = ( U T ) * ,
the condition that the Majorana–Dirac equation should describe neutral particles becomes:
Ψ M * = ( U 1 Ψ ^ M ) * = U T Ψ ^ M * = U 1 Ψ ^ M = Ψ M ;
therefore, the neutrality condition for the transformed four-components Majorana spinor now reads:
Ψ ^ M = U U T Ψ ^ M * .
For real, i.e., orthogonal U O ( 4 ) U ( 4 ) , one has U U T = 1 4 , and so again, Ψ ^ M * = Ψ ^ M .
The discussion above illustrates the complete equivalence of the four-component and the two-component Majorana formalism in the literature. The four-component field is related to an irreducible four-dimensional real spinor representation of the Lorentz group, whereas the two-component formalism is based on the two fundamental complex spinor representations.

6. Weyl–Majorana–Dirac Formalism

Considering now the most general free field case, the left- and right-chiral fields can be coupled via linear and anti-linear terms according to the following “Weyl–Majorana–Dirac equation”:
i σ μ μ ψ L η D , R m D , R ψ R η L m L ( i σ 2 ) ψ L * = 0 ,
i σ ¯ μ μ ψ R η D , L m D , L ψ L + η R m R ( i σ 2 ) ψ R * = 0 ,
with non-negative mass terms m L , m R , m D , L and m D , R and phase terms η L , η R , η D , L and η D , R in the unitary group U ( 1 ) . A polar decomposition of the complex mass terms according to:
m ˜ D , L = η D , L m D , L = m D , L e i φ D , L , m ˜ D , R = η D , R m D , R = m D , R e i φ D , R ,
m ˜ L = η L m L = m L e i φ L , m ˜ R = η R m R = m R e i φ R
with phases φ D , L , φ D , R , φ L , φ R ( π , π ] can also be used for notational convenience. When all mass terms vanish, Equations (154) and (155) trivially describe a left- and a right-chiral field. However, in the following, we consider the non-trivial Majorana–Dirac case where none of the mass terms above vanishes.
One may note first that using ( i σ 2 ) σ * = σ ( i σ 2 ) leads to ( i σ 2 ) K σ ¯ μ μ = σ μ μ ( i σ 2 ) K or:
ϵ K ̲ = ¯ ϵ K , ϵ K ¯ = ̲ ϵ K ,
where the operator K denotes complex conjugation. Hence, Equations (154) and (155) are fully equivalent to (keeping in mind that ( i σ 2 ) 2 = ϵ 2 = 1 2 , K η φ = η * K φ and K i = i K ):
i ¯ ( ϵ ψ L * ) + m ˜ D , R * ( ϵ ψ R * ) m ˜ L * ψ L = 0 ,
i ̲ ( ϵ ψ R * ) + m ˜ D , L * ( ϵ ψ L * ) + m ˜ R * ψ R = 0 ,
i.e., the left-chiral field ψ L is physically equivalent to a right-chiral field ϵ ψ L * , whereas the right-chiral field ψ R is equivalent to the left-chiral field ϵ ψ R * .
Working with the original Equations (154) and (155), which can be cast into the form:
i 0 ̲ ¯ 0 ψ R ψ L m ˜ D , R m ˜ L ϵ K m ˜ R ϵ K m ˜ D , L ψ R ψ L = 0
yields the compact representation:
i γ μ μ Ψ m ^ Ψ = 0 , Ψ = ψ R ψ L ,
with chiral Dirac matrices fulfilling the usual anti-commutation relations { γ μ , γ ν } = 2 g μ ν 1 4 and a non-linear mass operator m ^ .
Defining a dual mass operator:
m ˇ = m ˜ D , R m ˜ R ϵ K m ˜ L ϵ K m ˜ D , L
one obtains:
m ˇ m ^ = m ˜ D , R 2 + m R 2 ( m ˜ D , R m ˜ L + m ˜ D , L * m ˜ R ) ϵ K ( m ˜ D , R * m ˜ L + m ˜ D , L m ˜ R ) ϵ K m ˜ D , L 2 + m L 2 .
Acting with ( i γ ν ν m ˇ ) on Equation (161) leads to:
( i γ ν ν m ˇ ) ( i γ μ μ m ^ ) Ψ = ( + m ˇ m ^ + ( i γ ν ν ) m ^ m ˇ ( i γ μ μ ) ) Ψ = 0 ,
where (beware that K i = i K ):
( i γ ν ν ) m ^ m ˇ ( i γ μ μ )
= i ̲ m ˜ R ϵ K + m ˜ R ϵ K ¯ ( m ˜ D , L m ˜ D , R ) ̲ ( m ˜ D , R m ˜ D , L ) ¯ ¯ m ˜ L ϵ K m ˜ L ϵ K ̲ .
Using ϵ K ̲ = ¯ ϵ K and ϵ K ¯ = ̲ ϵ K again, the expression above reduces to:
( i γ ν ν ) m ^ m ˇ ( i γ μ μ ) = i 0 ( m ˜ D , L m ˜ D , R ) ̲ ( m ˜ D , R m ˜ D , L ) ¯ 0 .
We remember now that it is in fact possible to rescale, e.g., the right-chiral field ψ R according to Equation (133) in order to obtain field equations where the modulus of the Dirac mass terms fulfills m D , R = m D , L . Additionally, introducing a phase-transformed left-chiral field ψ L according to Equation (136):
ψ L = Γ L α / 2 ψ L = ψ L e i α / 2 ,
Equations (154) and (155) can be written as:
i σ μ μ ψ L m ˜ D , R ψ R m ˜ L ( i σ 2 ) ψ L * = 0 ,
i σ ¯ μ μ ψ R m ˜ D , L ψ L + m ˜ R ( i σ 2 ) ψ R * = 0 ,
with:
m ˜ D , L = m ˜ D , L e + i α / 2 , m ˜ D , R = m ˜ D , R e i α / 2 , m ˜ L = m ˜ L e i α , m ˜ R = m ˜ R .
A phase transformation of the right-chiral field ψ R only:
ψ R = Γ R β / 2 ψ R = ψ R e i β / 2
modifies the mass parameters in Equations (154) and (155) according to:
m ˜ D , L = m ˜ D , L e i β / 2 , m ˜ D , R = m ˜ D , R e + i β / 2 , m ˜ R = m ˜ R e i β , m ˜ L = m ˜ L .
Observing that the left-chiral Dirac mass term m ˜ D , L picks up the opposite phase compared to the right-chiral mass term m ˜ D , R under a phase transformation and considering the effect of rescaling one of the fields ψ L , R show that one could also start with an equivalent field theory where m ˜ D , R = m ˜ D , L = m ˜ D 0 . Additionally, the phase of m ˜ D can be chosen to fulfill:
R e ( m ˜ D ) 0 .
For m ˜ D = m ˜ D , R = m ˜ D , L , the operator ( i γ ν ν ) m ^ m ˇ ( i γ μ μ ) in Equation (166) vanishes, and the Majorana–Dirac Equation (160) is equivalent, after appropriate rescaling and phase transformation of the corresponding fields, to the field equation:
i 0 ̲ ¯ 0 ψ R ψ L m ˜ D m ˜ L ϵ K m ˜ R ϵ K m ˜ D ψ R ψ L = 0 ,
where any superscripts due to the aforegoing scaling and phase transformations have been omitted, and the fields obey the Klein–Gordon equation with generalized mass terms:
ψ R ψ L + m ˜ D 2 + m R 2 ( m ˜ D m ˜ L + m ˜ D * m ˜ R ) ϵ K ( m ˜ D * m ˜ L + m ˜ D m ˜ R ) ϵ K m ˜ D 2 + m L 2 ψ R ψ L = 0 .
However, there is still the freedom to perform a gauge transformation leaving the Dirac mass m ˜ D invariant, but changing m ˜ K and m ˜ R by a common phase. This freedom can be used to redefine the fields and correspondingly rotate the phases of m ˜ L and m ˜ R in order to obtain:
κ : = m ˜ D m ˜ L + m ˜ D * m ˜ R 0 ,
and every Majorana–Dirac equation with suitably redefined fields leads to the Klein–Gordon equation:
ψ R ψ L + m ˜ D 2 + m R 2 κ ϵ K μ ˜ ϵ K m ˜ D 2 + m L 2 ψ R ψ L = 0
with μ ˜ = m ˜ D * m ˜ L + m ˜ D m ˜ R . This Klein–Gordon equation can be written in a manifestly real form by introducing the real spinor:
Φ = ( ψ 1 , ψ 2 , ψ 8 ) T ,
with eight real components given by:
ψ R = ψ 1 + i ψ 2 ψ 3 + i ψ 4 , ψ L = ψ 5 + i ψ 6 ψ 7 + i ψ 8
according to:
Φ + M ^ 2 Φ = 0 .
Obviously, the mass operator M ^ 2 must be positive semi-definite in order to exclude time-asymmetric complex mass solutions or even tachyonic solutions of the Majorana–Dirac equation, and it must be Hermitian in order to generate a unitary dynamics of the single particle states described by the wave function Φ. Only then, the solutions of Equation (180) describe well-behaved normalizable single particle states as part of a stable theory, which are eigenstates of the energy-momentum squared Casimir operator of the double covering group of the inhomogeneous Poincaré group P ¯ + T 1 , 3 S L ( 2 , C ) , which is the semi-direct product of the time-space translation group T 1 , 3 and the universal cover S L ( 2 , C ) of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group S O + ( 1 , 3 ) . This condition restricts the admissible mass terms, as discussed in the following.
Using the abbreviations μ ˜ = μ 1 + i μ 2 and m ˜ D 2 = ν 1 + i ν 2 , the mass operator M ^ 2 reads:
M ^ 2 = ν 1 + m R 2 ν 2 0 0 0 0 κ 0 ν 2 ν 1 + m R 2 0 0 0 0 0 κ 0 0 ν 1 + m R 2 ν 2 κ 0 0 0 0 0 ν 2 ν 1 + m R 2 0 κ 0 0 0 0 μ 1 μ 2 ν 1 + m L 2 ν 2 0 0 0 0 μ 2 μ 1 ν 2 ν 1 + m L 2 0 0 μ 1 μ 2 0 0 0 0 ν 1 + m L 2 ν 2 μ 2 μ 1 0 0 0 0 ν 2 ν 1 + m L 2 .
Some straightforward algebra results in the following four doubly degenerate eigenvalues of M ^ 2 :
λ 1 , 2 = ν 1 + m L 2 + m R 2 2 ± m L 2 m R 2 2 2 + κ μ ˜ ν 2 2 + i ν 2 ( m L 2 m R 2 ) ,
λ 3 , 4 = ν 1 + m L 2 + m R 2 2 ± m L 2 m R 2 2 2 + κ μ ˜ * ν 2 2 i ν 2 ( m L 2 m R 2 ) .
The Hermiticity of M ^ 2 implies the conditions ν 2 = 0 and μ 2 = 0 . From ν 2 follows that m ˜ D 2 is real; considering additionally that κ is real and also μ ˜ must be real, m ˜ D becomes a real and positive parameter with Relation (173). Then, the eigenvalues of M ^ 2 become:
λ ± = m D 2 + m L 2 + m R 2 2 ± m L 2 m R 2 2 2 + m D 2 ( m ˜ L + m ˜ R ) 2 ,
with m = m ˜ L + m ˜ R real. This is the origin of the Majorana phase φ M graphically depicted in Figure 2.
Writing:
m ˜ R = m R e i φ R , m ˜ L = m L e i φ L , φ L = φ R + φ M ,
the sine and the cosine law imply:
m 2 = ( m ˜ L + m ˜ R ) 2 = m R 2 + m L 2 + 2 m R m L cos φ M
together with:
sin φ R = m L m sin φ M , sin φ L = m R m sin φ M , sin φ L sin φ R = m R m L .
For the special case φ M = 0 , the two Majorana masses become:
m ± 2 = m L + m R 2 ± m L m R 2 2 + m D 2 2 .
The explicit expressions for the mass eigenvalues illustrate how the presence of the Majorana mass term splits a Dirac field into a couple of two Majorana fields.
The discussion of the rather trivial cases where one or several of the Majorana or Dirac mass terms are absent or degenerate cases where some masses have the same modulus and special phase relations is left to the reader as an interesting exercise.

7. Finite-Dimensional Irreducible (Ray) Representations of the Proper Orthochronous Lorentz Group

7.1. Complex Representation Theory of the S L ( 2 , C )

In order to understand the findings of the last section from a more general perspective, we finally leave the restricted framework of the fundamental representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group and shortly revisit the most important results from the theory of its real and complex finite-dimensional representations [10]. Such a discussion fits nicely into the considerations exposed so far for spin- 1 2 fields only and will clarify the group theoretical background of the results obtained in the last section. It is assumed below that the reader is well acquainted with the basic notions of representation theory.
Classical ‘fields’ or ‘wave functions’ are spacetime-dependent functions or distributions serving for the construction and description of a multiplicity of purely theoretical quantities or observables closely related to the measurement process. The transformation property of fields transforming according to:
Ψ λ ( x ) = D λ ρ ( Λ ) Ψ ρ ( x ) , x μ = Λ ν μ x ν ,
where D ( Λ ) is a n × n -representation matrix, which is associated with a not necessarily irreducible (ray) representation of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group, will be referred to as manifestly Lorentz invariant in the following, if the defining (ray) representation property:
D λ ρ ( Λ 2 Λ 1 ) = ± D λ α ( Λ 2 ) D α ρ ( Λ 1 )
holds. The sign appearing above, which distinguishes ordinary representations from ray representations by allowing for a phase in the homomorphism property, may appear in the case of the so-called spinor ray representations (of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group S O + ( 1 , 3 ) ) defined below, a result that will not be motivated any further in this paper [10].
A well-known result from the representation theory of the rotation group states that all finite-dimensional irreducible ray representations ϑ j of S O ( 3 ) (or all finite-dimensional irreps of the corresponding universal covering group S U ( 2 ) ) can be labeled by j = ( n 1 ) / 2 , where n N is the dimension of ϑ j , since all irreducible (ray) representations of a given dimension n are unique up to equivalence. Furthermore, the tensor (or Kronecker, or direct) product of two such representations decays into a direct sum according to the Clebsch–Gordan decomposition:
ϑ j 1 ϑ j 2 = j = | j 1 j 2 | j 1 + j 2 ϑ j , or j 1 j 2 = | j 1 j 2 | | j 1 j 2 + 1 | | j 1 + j 2 | ,
i.e., we denote representations up to equivalence by the symbol ϑ j or directly by the ‘quantum number’ j, which classifies the representation; e.g., the tensor product of two spin- 1 2 -representations contains a spin-0 and a spin-1-representation:
ϑ 1 2 ϑ 1 2 = ϑ 0 ϑ 1 , or 1 2 1 2 = 0 1 .
A S U ( 2 ) -representation ϑ j and its complex conjugate representation ϑ j * are equivalent.
Going beyond the rotation group, one finds that all existing finite-dimensional (ray) irreps ϑ j , j of the group ( S O + ( 1 , 3 ) ) S L ( 2 , C ) can be labeled by two indices j , j = 0 , 1 2 , 1 , 3 2 , , and the Clebsch–Gordan decomposition (191) generalizes to:
ϑ j 1 , j 1 ϑ j 2 , j 2 = J = | j 1 j 2 | j 1 + j 2 J = | j 1 j 2 | j 1 + j 2 ϑ J , J .
The ϑ j , j can be constructed as tensor products according to:
ϑ j , j = ϑ j , 0 ϑ 0 , j = ϑ j , 0 ϑ j , 0 * ,
and consequently, all ϑ j , j can be generated inductively from the fundamental representations ϑ 0 , 1 2 and ϑ 1 2 , 0 ; for this reason, they are called fundamental. Restricting the S L ( 2 , C ) -representations ϑ j , 0 and ϑ 0 , j to the subgroup S U ( 2 ) leads to the S U ( 2 ) -representations ϑ j . The analogy of the decomposition (193) with the S U ( 2 ) case is rooted in the fact that the complex six-dimensional Lie algebra of the complex Lorentz group S O ( 4 , C ) is the direct sum of two S O ( 3 , C ) Lie subalgebras, which itself originates from the algebra of rotation and boost generators in the real case. The complex dimension n = d i m C ( ϑ j , j ) is given by n = ( 2 j + 1 ) ( 2 j + 1 ) . One should note that interchanging the indices j and j according to:
ϑ j , j = ϑ j , j *
relates complex conjugate representations that are not equivalent for j j . The representations ϑ j , j are real, i.e., they can be represented by real ( 2 j + 1 ) 2 × ( 2 j + 1 ) 2 -matrices. Only the trivial representation ϑ 0 , 0 of the Lorentz group is unitary. All other unitary irreps of the Lorentz group are infinite-dimensional and are commonly constructed by the help of wave function spaces.
The following fields, transforming according to the lowest-dimensional, not necessarily irreducible (ray) representations ϑ j , j of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group, play the most important roles in relativistic (quantum) field theory in 3 + 1 -dimensional Minkowski spacetime:
  • ( j , j ) = ( 0 , 0 ) : Real or complex scalar field φ ( x ) .
    φ ( x ) = D 0 , 0 ( Λ ) φ ( x ) = φ ( x ) = φ ( Λ 1 x ) .
  • ( j , j ) = ( 1 2 , 0 ) : Complex two-component right-chiral spinor field ψ R ( x ) .
    ψ R , α ( x ) = A α β ( Λ ) ψ R , β ( x ) = A α β ( Λ ) ψ R , β ( Λ 1 x ) , A ( Λ ) = D 1 2 , 0 ( Λ ) .
  • ( j , j ) = ( 0 , 1 2 ) : Complex two-component left-chiral spinor field ψ L ( x ) .
    ψ L , α ¯ ( x ) = A α ¯ * β ¯ ( Λ ) ψ L , β ¯ ( x ) = A α ¯ * β ¯ ( Λ ) ψ L , β ¯ ( Λ 1 x ) , A * ( Λ ) = D 0 , 1 2 ( Λ ) .
    As a reminiscence to the literature using dotted and non-dotted spinor indices according to varying conventions, two types of spinor indices were used above to distinguish between the two fundamental S L ( 2 , C ) -representations.
  • ( j , j ) = ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) : Real or complex vector field V α β ¯ ( x ) / V μ ( x ) .
    One has ϑ 1 2 , 1 2 = ϑ 1 2 , 0 ϑ 0 , 1 2 or ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) = ( 1 2 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 2 ) , and the transformation law following for V α β ¯ ( x ) under the direct product of the representations ϑ 1 2 , 0 and ϑ 0 , 1 2 = ϑ 1 2 , 0 * :
    V α β ¯ ( x ) = A α γ A β ¯ * δ ¯ V γ δ ¯ ( Λ 1 x )
    can be cast into an interesting form by using the generalized Pauli matrices as a basis of the complex vector space of the 2 × 2 -matrices M a t ( 2 , C ) in order to define the four fields V 0 , V 1 , V 2 and V 3 according to:
    V γ δ ¯ ( x ) = μ = 0 3 V μ ( x ) ( σ μ ) γ δ ¯ = V μ ( x ) ( σ μ ) γ δ ¯ V 0 + V 3 V 1 i V 2 V 1 + i V 2 V 0 V 3 ( x ) ,
    leading to:
    V μ ( σ μ ) α β ¯ ( x ) = V α β ¯ ( x ) = A α γ A β ¯ * δ ¯ V γ δ ¯ ( Λ 1 x )
    = ( A V ( x ) A + ) α β ¯ V 0 + V 3 V 1 i V 2 V 1 + i V 2 V 0 V 3 ( x ) = ! ( Λ ν μ V ν ( x ) ) ( σ μ ) α β ¯ .
    Indeed, V μ is a vector field and transforms like the spacetime coordinates. The V μ are not necessarily complex, as one knows from the relativistic four-potential A μ in electrodynamics or the (massive) classical Proca field Z μ used to describe the classical Z-boson. In the complex case, the vector field may be used to describe charged fields W * μ W μ and associated particles like the W-bosons.
  • ( j , j ) = ( 1 , 0 ) or ( 0 , 1 ) : Complex Riemann–Silberstein vector fields F ( x ) = E ( x ) + i B ( x ) or F ( x ) * = E ( x ) i B ( x ) .
    The direct sum of the representations ( 1 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 ) can be used to construct a six-dimensional real representation of the Lorentz group, which is linked to the Lorentz transformation properties of the electric and magnetic field E ( x ) and B ( x ) , respectively.
  • ( 1 2 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 2 ) : Dirac spinors Ψ ( x ) .
    Dirac spinors are used to describe the standard model spin- 1 2 particles, i.e., leptons and quarks. The representation ( 1 2 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 2 ) can be restricted to four real dimensions and leads to the concept of four-component Majorana fields. This observation is one of the main subjects of this paper and will be elucidated below in further detail.

7.2. Real (Ray) Representations of the Proper Orthochronous Lorentz Group

Complex half-integer representations ϑ j , j with j + j = 1 2 , 3 2 , 5 2 , are called spinor ray representations of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group; integer representations ϑ j , j with j + j N are tensor representations. Spinor representations are faithful representations of the S L ( 2 , C ) . The reduction Formula (193) explicitly holds in the case of the complex representation theory of the groups S L ( 2 , C ) and S O + ( 1 , 3 ) . However, also real irreducible representations play a crucial role in quantum mechanics in connection with the description of neutral fields like, e.g., the Higgs field in the standard model, the real antisymmetric field strength tensor in electrodynamics or the gravitational Field. Of course, these classical entities lead to states in corresponding (Fock–)Hilbert spaces after second quantization, and these states can be superposed according to the manifest complex structure of quantum mechanics.
The real irreducible S L ( 2 , C ) -representations can be classified into two types [11]:
  • Type 1: ϑ j R ( j = 0 , 1 2 , 1 , 3 2 , ) is obtained from restricting a complex representation ϑ j , j acting on C C ( 2 j + 1 ) 2 to a real subspace, which is isomorphic to R R ( 2 j + 1 ) 2 . A more suggestive notation used below for such representations obtained from the complex irreps ( j , j ) is ( j , j ) R .
  • Type 2: ϑ j , k R ϑ k , j R with j k is obtained from restricting the direct sum ϑ j , k ϑ k , j of an S L ( 2 , C ) irrep and its complex conjugate to the real subspace R R 2 ( 2 j + 1 ) ( 2 k + 1 ) C C 2 ( 2 j + 1 ) ( 2 k + 1 ) . From a ‘complex point of view’, such representations are reducible, but they are not reducible in the real sense. These representations shall be denoted below by ( j , k ) R ( k , j ) R . Having projected out such a real representation from ϑ j , k ϑ k , j , there remains a second equivalent real representation with, of course, the same dimension; the total dimension of both real representations is then 4 ( 2 j + 1 ) ( 2 k + 1 ) = dim R C 2 ( 2 j + 1 ) ( 2 k + 1 ) .
Since the second type is directly linked to the group theory of Dirac and Majorana fields, this case shall be investigated in the following pedestrian way. The real irreducible representations contained in the complex reducible S L ( 2 , C ) -representation ϑ j , k ϑ k , j can be isolated by the following explicit calculations. Let R and I denote the real and the imaginary part of the n × n -representation matrix D ( A ) = R ( A ) + i I ( A ) with A S L ( 2 , C ) and n = ( 2 j + 1 ) ( 2 k + 1 ) , corresponding to a given representation ( j , k ) . Then, a 2 n × 2 n -representation matrix D ˜ of the direct sum ( j , k ) ( k , j ) = ( j , k ) ( j , k ) * can be written as:
D ˜ = R + i I 0 0 R i I .
As a complex representation matrix, D ˜ acts on complex 2 n -component column vectors in C C 2 n . However, we now focus on the real 2 n -dimensional subspace spanned by vectors, which can be represented in the form:
v = v 1 + i v 2 v 1 i v 2 , v 1 , 2 R n .
Such vectors are real linear combinations of the 2 n basis vectors:
1 0 0 1 0 0 , 0 1 0 0 1 0 , , 0 0 1 0 0 1 , , i 0 0 i 0 0 , 0 i 0 0 i 0 , , 0 0 i 0 0 i .
When D ˜ acts as a linear operator on such a vector v, one obtains:
D ˜ v = R + i I 0 0 R i I v 1 + i v 2 v 1 i v 2 = R v 1 I v 2 + i ( I v 1 + R v 2 ) R v 1 I v 2 i ( I v 1 + R v 2 ) .
This result can be immediately translated into a real representation defined by real matrices D ^ :
v 1 v 2 D ^ v 1 v 2 = R I I R v 1 v 2 = R v 1 I v 2 I v 1 + R v 2 ,
which display the multiplicative (homomorphism) representation property of their complex counterparts:
D ˜ 2 , 1 = D ˜ 2 D ˜ 1 = R 2 + i I 2 0 0 R 2 i I 2 R 1 + i I 1 0 0 R 1 i I 1
= R 2 R 1 I 2 I 1 + i ( R 2 I 1 + I 2 R 1 ) 0 0 R 2 R 1 I 2 I 1 i ( R 2 I 1 + I 2 R 1 )
becomes in the real case:
D ^ 2 , 1 = D ^ 2 D ^ 1 = R 2 I 2 I 2 R 2 R 1 I 1 I 1 R 1 = R 2 R 1 I 2 I 1 R 2 I 1 I 2 R 1 R 2 I 1 + I 2 R 1 R 2 R 1 I 2 I 1 ;
e.g., considering the Kronecker product of two vector representations, one has in the complex case from decomposition (193) in compact notation:
( 1 2 , 1 2 ) ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) = ( 0 , 0 ) ( 1 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 ) ( 1 , 1 ) .
Restricting this complex result to the real content leads to a sum of two Type 1 real representations ( ( 0 , 0 ) and ( 1 , 1 ) ) and a Type 2 real representation ( ( 1 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 ) ):
( ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) ) R = ( 0 , 0 ) R ( 1 , 0 ) R ( 1 , 1 ) R .
For the direct product of the real representations, one has therefore:
ϑ 1 2 R ϑ 1 2 R d i m R = 16 = ϑ 0 R d i m R = 1 ϑ 1 , 0 R d i m R = 6 ϑ 1 R d i m R = 9 .
This decomposition is best illustrated by investigating a real second rank tensor field T μ ν ( x ) , which transforms according to the tensor product of the real representation of the proper orthochronous Lorentz group S O + ( 1 , 3 ) by itself and with itself according to:
T μ ν ( x ) = Λ α μ Λ β ν T α β ( x ) ,
i.e., according to ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) R ( 1 2 , 1 2 ) R . T μ ν ( x ) can be decomposed in a unique manner into a spacetime-dependent part, which is proportional to the inverse metric tensor g μ ν = d i a g ( 1 , 1 , 1 , 1 ) , an antisymmetric tensor F μ ν ( x ) = F ν μ ( x ) and a traceless symmetric tensor H μ ν ( x ) = H ν μ ( x ) with H μ μ ( x ) = g μ ν H μ ν ( x ) = 0 , as follows:
T μ ν ( x ) = φ ( x ) g μ ν + F μ ν ( x ) + H μ ν ( x ) ,
where (note that g μ μ = δ μ μ = 4 ):
φ ( x ) = 1 4 T μ μ ( x ) , F μ ν ( x ) = 1 2 ( T μ ν ( x ) T ν μ ( x ) ) , H μ ν ( x ) = 1 2 ( T μ ν ( x ) + T ν μ ( x ) ) φ ( x ) g μ ν .
The antisymmetric tensor field F μ ν is given by six real spacetime-dependent field components transforming under the ( 1 , 0 ) R -representation; the traceless symmetric tensor field H μ ν contains nine independent real field components ( ( 1 , 1 ) R ); and the component in T μ ν , which is proportional to the inverse metric tensor is related to the real scalar field φ ( x ) ( ( 0 , 0 ) R ); everything in accordance with the decomposition displayed in (211).
In matrix notation, the transformation (212) can be expressed by T = Λ T Λ T , and the trace T μ μ becomes tr ( T g ) . Obviously, due to the defining property Λ T g Λ = g of the matrices in O ( 1 , 3 ) :
tr ( T g ) = tr ( Λ T Λ T g ) = tr ( T Λ T g Λ ) = tr ( T g )
holds, i.e., the trace of a second rank tensor is a Lorentz invariant scalar.
Having all of these group theoretical tools in our backpack, the observations elaborated in the last section by explicit calculations now receive a simple explanation. Coupling a left- and a right-handed chiral (Weyl) spinor field by mass terms as performed in Equations (154) and (155) imposes an additional dynamics on the total field of four complex or eight real field components. In the Dirac case, the mass spectrum is degenerate, and the structure of the field equations remains complex, such that the field components transform according to the reducible complex representation ( 1 2 , 0 ) ( 0 , 1 2 ) ; complex linear superpositions of solutions of the field equations are still solutions. In the Majorana case, the representation splits up into two equivalent real four-dimensional representations ( 1 2 , 0 ) R of Type 2, with representation spaces, which are invariant under the proper orthochronous Lorentz group, containing two real four-component Majorana fields with independent dynamics imposed by the equations of motion and independent Majorana masses.

8. Conclusions

In this paper, a comprehensive derivation and concise discussion of the free field wave equations governing the dynamics of the fundamental two-component and four-component spin- 1 2 matter fields in Minkowski spacetime is presented. The discussion is solely based on first principles, like Lorentz symmetry, locality, causality and unitarity, which result in the hyperbolic differential equations describing Weyl, Dirac or Majorana fields. Coupling a fundamental two-component left-chiral field with a two-component right-chiral field in the most general non-trivial way leads to Dirac fields or Majorana fields and an emergent Majorana phase. A pure matrix-based formalism is used, avoiding an explicit van der Waerden notation [12], with dotted and non-dotted spinor indices sometimes confusing researchers from different fields, which are more familiar with a notation inspired from linear algebra.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. The four pairwise disjoint and non-compact connected components of the Lorentz group L = O ( 1 , 3 ) and corresponding subgroups: the proper Lorentz group L + = S O ( 1 , 3 ) , the orthochronous Lorentz group L , the orthochronous Lorentz group L o = L + T L + (see below) and the proper orthochronous Lorentz group L + = S O + ( 1 , 3 ) , which contains the identity element. Of course, the sets L , L and L + do not represent groups due to the missing identity element.
Figure 1. The four pairwise disjoint and non-compact connected components of the Lorentz group L = O ( 1 , 3 ) and corresponding subgroups: the proper Lorentz group L + = S O ( 1 , 3 ) , the orthochronous Lorentz group L , the orthochronous Lorentz group L o = L + T L + (see below) and the proper orthochronous Lorentz group L + = S O + ( 1 , 3 ) , which contains the identity element. Of course, the sets L , L and L + do not represent groups due to the missing identity element.
Symmetry 08 00087 g001
Figure 2. Left- and right-chiral mass terms m ˜ L , R with a relative Majorana phase φ M adding up to a real mass term m = m ˜ R + m ˜ L .
Figure 2. Left- and right-chiral mass terms m ˜ L , R with a relative Majorana phase φ M adding up to a real mass term m = m ˜ R + m ˜ L .
Symmetry 08 00087 g002

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