Weyl, Majorana and Dirac Fields from a Unified Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Structure of the Lorentz Group
2.1. Connected Components and Important Subgroups of the (Complex) Lorentz Group
3. Fundamental Ray Representations of the Proper Orthochronous Lorentz Group
3.1. Explicit Construction of the Two Two-Dimensional Inequivalent Irreducible Fundamental Ray Representations
3.2. Wigner Boosts
3.3. Topology of the Group Manifold
4. Spin-: Two-Component Spinor Wave Equations
4.1. Weyl Equations
4.2. Two-Component Majorana Equations
5. Spin-: Four-Component Complex and Real Spinor Wave Equations
5.1. Dirac Equation
5.2. Real Four-Component Majorana Equation
6. Weyl–Majorana–Dirac Formalism
7. Finite-Dimensional Irreducible (Ray) Representations of the Proper Orthochronous Lorentz Group
7.1. Complex Representation Theory of the
- : Real or complex scalar field .
- : Complex two-component right-chiral spinor field .
- : Complex two-component left-chiral spinor field .
- : Real or complex vector field .One has or , and the transformation law following for under the direct product of the representations and :Indeed, is a vector field and transforms like the spacetime coordinates. The are not necessarily complex, as one knows from the relativistic four-potential in electrodynamics or the (massive) classical Proca field used to describe the classical Z-boson. In the complex case, the vector field may be used to describe charged fields and associated particles like the W-bosons.
- or : Complex Riemann–Silberstein vector fields or .The direct sum of the representations 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 and , respectively.
- : Dirac spinors .Dirac spinors are used to describe the standard model spin- particles, i.e., leptons and quarks. The representation 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
- Type 1: () is obtained from restricting a complex representation acting on to a real subspace, which is isomorphic to . A more suggestive notation used below for such representations obtained from the complex irreps is .
- Type 2: with is obtained from restricting the direct sum of an irrep and its complex conjugate to the real subspace . 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 . Having projected out such a real representation from , there remains a second equivalent real representation with, of course, the same dimension; the total dimension of both real representations is then .
8. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
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Aste, A. Weyl, Majorana and Dirac Fields from a Unified Perspective. Symmetry 2016, 8, 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym8090087
Aste A. Weyl, Majorana and Dirac Fields from a Unified Perspective. Symmetry. 2016; 8(9):87. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym8090087
Chicago/Turabian StyleAste, Andreas. 2016. "Weyl, Majorana and Dirac Fields from a Unified Perspective" Symmetry 8, no. 9: 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym8090087
APA StyleAste, A. (2016). Weyl, Majorana and Dirac Fields from a Unified Perspective. Symmetry, 8(9), 87. https://doi.org/10.3390/sym8090087