Gell-Mann matrices
The Gell-Mann matrices, named for Murray Gell-Mann, are one possible representation of the infinitesimal generators of the special unitary group called SU(3). The Lie algebra of this group (a real Lie algebra in fact) has dimension eight and therefore it has some set with eight linearly independent generators, which can be written as , with i taking values from 1 to 8.
Defining relations
These Lie Algebra elements obey the commutation relations
where a sum over the index k is implied. The structure constants are completely antisymmetric in the three indices and have values
Any set of Hermitian matrices which obey these relations qualifies. A particular choice of matrices is called a group representation, because any element of SU(3) can be written in the form , where are real numbers and a sum over the index j is implied. Given one representation, another may be obtained by an arbitrary unitary transformation, since that leaves the commutator unchanged.
Particular representations
An important representation involves 3×3 matrices, because the group elements then act on complex vectors with 3 entries, i.e., on the fundamental representation of the group. A particular choice of this representation is
and .
These matrices are traceless, Hermitian, and obey the extra relation . These properties were chosen by Gell-Mann because they then generalize the Pauli matrices for SU(2). They also naturally extend to general SU(n), cf. Generalizations of Pauli matrices.
In this representation, it is clear that the Cartan subalgebra is the set of linear combinations (with real coefficients) of the two matrices and , which commute with each other. There are 3 independent SU(2) subgroups: , , and , where the x and y are linear combinations of and .
The squared sum of the Gell-Mann matrices gives the quadratic Casimir operator, a group invariant,
- .
There is another, independent, cubic Casimir operator, as well.
These matrices serve to study the internal rotations among the different coloured quarks in quantum chromodynamics.
See also
- Generalizations of Pauli matrices
- Unitary groups and group representations
- Quark model, colour charge and quantum chromodynamics
- colors of the Gluon
References
- Georgi, H. (1999). Lie Algebras in Particle Physics (2nd ed.). Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-7382-0233-4.
- Arfken, G. B.; Weber, H. J.; Harris, F. E. (2000). Mathematical Methods for Physicists (7th ed.). Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-12-384654-9.
- Kokkedee, J. J. J. (1969). The Quark Model. W. A. Benjamin. LCCN 69014391.