Primary field
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In theoretical physics, a primary field is a field operator in quantum field theory - especially conformal field theory or a theory with supersymmetry - that is invariant under the positive frequency modes of the Virasoro algebra - or under one half of the supersymmetries and superconformal generators.
In conformal field theory, a primary field is equivalent to a tensor field with well-defined weights and simple OPE with the stress-energy tensor. In the state-operator correspondence, a primary field is associated with a highest-weight vector.
A descendant field or a secondary field is, on the contrary, a field that is not primary but a field that can be written as the action of negative frequency modes of the Virasoro algebra on a primary field. In terms of representation theory, each representation contains one primary field and many descendant fields.