Representation theory of the Lorentz group

Hendrik Antoon Lorentz (right) after whom the Lorentz group is named and Albert Einstein whose special theory of relativity is the main source of application. Photo taken by Paul Ehrenfest 1921.

The Lorentz group is a Lie group of symmetries of the spacetime of special relativity. This group can be realized as a collection of matrices, linear transformations, or unitary operators on some Hilbert space; it has a variety of representations. In any relativistically invariant physical theory, these representations must enter in some fashion;[nb 1] physics itself must be made out of them. Indeed, special relativity together with quantum mechanics are the two physical theories that are most thoroughly established,[nb 2] and the conjunction of these two theories is the study of the infinite-dimensional unitary representations of the Lorentz group. These have both historical importance in mainstream physics, as well as connections to more speculative present-day theories.

The full theory of the finite-dimensional representations of the Lie algebra of the Lorentz group is deduced using the general framework of the representation theory of semisimple Lie algebras. The finite-dimensional representations of the connected component of the full Lorentz group O(3; 1) are obtained by employing the Lie correspondence and the matrix exponential. The full finite-dimensional representation theory of the universal covering group (and also the spin group, a double cover) of is obtained, and explicitly given in terms of action on a function space in representations of and . The representatives of time reversal and space inversion are given in space inversion and time reversal, completing the finite-dimensional theory for the full Lorentz group. The general properties of the (m, n) representations are outlined. Action on function spaces is considered, with the action on spherical harmonics and the Riemann P-functions appearing as examples. The infinite-dimensional case of irreducible unitary representations are realized for the principal series and the complementary series. Finally, the Plancherel formula for is given, and representations of SO(3, 1) are classified and realized for Lie algebras.

The development of the representation theory has historically followed the development of the more general theory of representation theory of semisimple groups, largely due to Élie Cartan and Hermann Weyl, but the Lorentz group has also received special attention due to its importance in physics. Notable contributors are physicist E. P. Wigner and mathematician Valentine Bargmann with their Bargmann–Wigner program,[1] one conclusion of which is, roughly, a classification of all unitary representations of the inhomogeneous Lorentz group amounts to a classification of all possible relativistic wave equations.[2] The classification of the irreducible infinite-dimensional representations of the Lorentz group was established by Paul Dirac´s doctoral student in theoretical physics, Harish-Chandra, later turned mathematician,[nb 3] in 1947. The corresponding classification for was published independently by Bargmann and Israel Gelfand together with Mark Naimark in the same year.

The non-technical introduction contains some prerequisite material for readers not familiar with representation theory. Standard results used here from general finite-dimensional representation theory are outlined in technical introduction to finite-dimensional representation theory. The Lie algebra basis and other adopted conventions are given in conventions and Lie algebra bases. There is a substantially detailed article on the present subject to be found at Wikiversity.

Non-technical introduction to representation theory

The present purpose is to illustrate the role of representation theory of groups in mathematics and in physics. Rigor and detail take the back seat, as the main objective is to fix the notion of finite-dimensional and infinite-dimensional representations of the Lorentz group. The reader familiar with these concepts should skip by.

Applications

Many of the representations, both finite-dimensional and infinite-dimensional, are important in theoretical physics. Representations appear in the description of fields in classical field theory, most importantly the electromagnetic field, and of particles in relativistic quantum mechanics, as well as of both particles and quantum fields in quantum field theory and of various objects in string theory and beyond. The representation theory also provides the theoretical ground for the concept of spin. The theory enters into general relativity in the sense that in small enough regions of spacetime, physics is that of special relativity.[4]

The finite-dimensional irreducible non-unitary representations together with the irreducible infinite-dimensional unitary representations of the inhomogeneous Lorentz group, the Poincare group, are the representations that have direct physical relevance.[5][6]

Infinite-dimensional unitary representations of the Lorentz group appear by restriction of the irreducible infinite-dimensional unitary representations of the Poincaré group acting on the Hilbert spaces of relativistic quantum mechanics and quantum field theory. But these are also of mathematical interest and of potential direct physical relevance in other roles than that of a mere restriction.[7] There were speculative theories,[8][9] (tensors and spinors have infinite counterparts in the expansors of Dirac and the expinors of Harish-Chandra) consistent with relativity and quantum mechanics, but they have found no proven physical application. Modern speculative theories potentially have similar ingredients per below.

Mathematics

From the point of view that the goal of mathematics is to classify and characterize, the representation theory of the Lorentz group is since 1947 a finished chapter. But in association with the BargmannWigner programme, there are (as of 2006) yet unresolved purely mathematical problems, linked to the infinite-dimensional unitary representations.

The irreducible infinite-dimensional unitary representations may have indirect relevance to physical reality in speculative modern theories since the (generalized) Lorentz group appears as the little group of the Poincare group of spacelike vectors in higher spacetime dimension. The corresponding infinite-dimensional unitary representations of the (generalized) Poincaré group are the so-called tachyonic representations. Tachyons appear in the spectrum of bosonic strings and are associated with instability of the vacuum.[10][11] Even though tachyons may not be realized in nature, these representations must be mathematically understood in order to understand string theory. This is so since tachyon states turn out to appear in superstring theories too in attempts to create realistic models.[12]

One open problem (as of 2006) is the completion of the BargmannWigner programme for the isometry group SO(D – 2, 1) of the de Sitter spacetime dSD – 2. Ideally, the physical components of wave functions would be realized on the hyperboloid dSD – 2 of radius μ > 0 embedded in and the corresponding O(D − 2, 1) covariant wave equations of the infinite-dimensional unitary representation to be known.[11]

It is common in mathematics to regard the Lorentz group to be, foremost, the Möbius group to which it is isomorphic. The group may be represented in terms of a set of functions defined on the Riemann sphere. These are the Riemann P-functions, which are expressible as hypergeometric functions.

Classical field theory

While the electromagnetic field together with the gravitational field are the only classical fields providing accurate descriptions of nature, other types of classical fields are important too. In the approach to quantum field theory (QFT) referred to as second quantization, the starting point is one or more classical fields, where e.g. the wave functions solving the Dirac equation are considered as classical fields prior to (second) quantization.[13] While second quantization and the Lagrangian formalism associated with it is not a fundamental aspect of QFT,[14] it is the case that so far all quantum field theories can be approached this way, including the standard model.[15] In these cases, there are classical versions of the field equations following from the Euler–Lagrange equations derived from the Lagrangian using the principle of least action. These field equations must be relativistically invariant, and their solutions (which will qualify as relativistic wave functions according to the definition below) must transform under some representation of the Lorentz group.

The action of the Lorentz group on the space of field configurations (a field configuration is the spacetime history of a particular solution, e.g. the electromagnetic field in all of space over all time is one field configuration) resembles the action on the Hilbert spaces of quantum mechanics, except that the commutator brackets are replaced by field theoretical Poisson brackets.[13]

Relativistic quantum mechanics

For the present purposes the following definition is made:[16] A relativistic wave function is a set of n functions ψα on spacetime which transforms under an arbitrary proper Lorentz transformation Λ as

where D[Λ] is an n-dimensional matrix representative of Λ belonging to some direct sum of the (m, n) representations to be introduced below.

The most useful relativistic quantum mechanics one-particle theories (there are no fully consistent such theories) are the Klein–Gordon equation[17] and the Dirac equation[18] in their original setting. They are relativistically invariant and their solutions transform under the Lorentz group as Lorentz scalars ((m, n) = (0, 0)) and bispinors respectively ((0, 1/2) ⊕ (1/2, 0)). The electromagnetic field is a relativistic wave function according to this definition, transforming under (1, 0) ⊕ (0, 1).[19]

The infinite-dimensional representations may be used in the analysis of scattering.[20]

Quantum field theory

In QFT, the demand for relativistic invariance enters, among other ways in that the S-matrix necessarily must be Poincaré invariant.[21] This has the implication that there is one or more infinite-dimensional representation of the Lorentz group acting on Fock space.[nb 10] One way to guarantee the existence of such representations is the existence of a Lagrangian description (with modest requirements imposed, see the reference) of the system using the canonical formalism, from which a realization of the generators of the Lorentz group may be deduced.[22]

The transformations of field operators illustrate the complementary role played by the finite-dimensional representations of the Lorentz group and the infinite-dimensional unitary representations of the Poincare group, witnessing the deep unity between mathematics and physics.[23] For illustration, consider the definition an n-component field operator:[24] A relativistic field operator is a set of n operator valued functions on spacetime which transforms under proper Poincaré transformations (Λ, a) according to[25][26]

Here U[Λ, a] is the unitary operator representing (Λ, a) on the Hilbert space on which Ψ is defined and D is an n-dimensional representation of the Lorentz group. The transformation rule is the second Wightman axiom of quantum field theory.

By considerations of differential constraints that the field operator must be subjected to in order to describe a single particle with definite mass m and spin s (or helicity), it is deduced that[27][nb 11]

 

 

 

 

(X1)

where a, a are interpreted as creation and annihilation operators respectively. The creation operator a transforms according to[27][28]

and similarly for the annihilation operator. The point to be made is that the field operator transforms according to a finite-dimensional non-unitary representation of the Lorentz group, while the creation operator transforms under the infinite-dimensional unitary representation of the Poincare group characterized by the mass and spin (m, s) of the particle. The connection between the two are the wave functions, also called coefficient functions

that carry both the indices (x, α) operated on by Lorentz transformations and the indices (p, σ) operated on by Poincaré transformations. This may be called the LorentzPoincaré connection.[29] Too exhibit the connection, subject both sides of equation (X1) to a Lorentz transformation resulting in for e.g. u,

where D is the non-unitary Lorentz group representative of Λ and D(s) is a unitary representative of the so-called Wigner rotation R associated to Λ and p that derives from the representation of the Poincaré group, and s is the spin of the particle.

All of the above formulas, including the definition of the field operator in terms of creation and annihilation operators, as well as the differential equations satisfied by the field operator for a particle with specified mass, spin and the (m, n) representation under which it is supposed to transform,[nb 12] and also that of the wave function, can be derived from group theoretical considerations alone once the frameworks of quantum mechanics and special relativity is given.[nb 13]

Speculative theories

In theories in which spacetime can have more than D = 4 dimensions, the generalized Lorentz groups O(D − 1; 1) of the appropriate dimension take the place of O(3; 1).[nb 14]

The requirement of Lorentz invariance takes on perhaps its most dramatic effect in string theory. Classical relativistic strings can be handled in the Lagrangian framework by using the Nambu–Goto action.[30] This results in a relativistically invariant theory in any spacetime dimension.[31] But as it turns out, the theory of open and closed bosonic strings (the simplest string theory) is impossible to quantize in such a way that the Lorentz group is represented on the space of states (a Hilbert space) unless the dimension of spacetime is 26.[32] The corresponding result for superstring theory is again deduced demanding Lorentz invariance, but now with supersymmetry. In these theories the Poincaré algebra is replaced by a supersymmetry algebra which is a Z2-graded Lie algebra extending the Poincaré algebra. The structure of such an algebra is to a large degree fixed by the demands of Lorentz invariance. In particular, the fermionic operators (grade 1) belong to a (0, 1/2) or (1/2, 0) representation space of the (ordinary) Lorentz Lie algebra.[33] The only possible dimension of spacetime in such theories is 10.[34]

Finite-dimensional representations

Representation theory of groups in general, and Lie groups in particular, is a very rich subject. The full Lorentz group is no exception. The Lorentz group has some properties that makes it "agreeable" and others that make it "not very agreeable" within the context of representation theory. The group is simple and thus semisimple, but is not connected, and none of its components are simply connected. Perhaps most importantly, the Lorentz group is not compact.[35]

For finite-dimensional representations, the presence of semisimplicity means that the Lorentz group can be dealt with the same way as other semisimple groups using a well-developed theory. In addition, all representations are built from the irreducible ones, since the Lie algebra possesses the complete reducibility property.[nb 15][36] But, the non-compactness of the Lorentz group, in combination with lack of simple connectedness, cannot be dealt with in all the aspects as in the simple framework that applies to simply connected, compact groups. Non-compactness implies, for a connected simple Lie group, that no nontrivial finite-dimensional unitary representations exist.[37] Lack of simple connectedness gives rise to spin representations of the group.[38] The non-connectedness means that, for representations of the full Lorentz group, time reversal and space inversion has to dealt with separately.[39][40]

History

The development of the finite-dimensional representation theory of the Lorentz group mostly follows that of the subject in general. Lie theory originated with Sophus Lie in 1873.[41][42] By 1888 the classification of simple Lie algebras was essentially completed by Wilhelm Killing.[43][44] In 1913 the theorem of highest weight for representations of simple Lie algebras, the path that will be followed here, was completed by Élie Cartan.[45][46] Richard Brauer was 1935–38 largely responsible for the development of the Weyl-Brauer matrices describing how spin representations of the Lorentz Lie algebra can be embedded in Clifford algebras.[47][48] The Lorentz group has also historically received special attention in representation theory, see History of infinite-dimensional unitary representations below, due to its exceptional importance in physics. Mathematicians Hermann Weyl[45][49][41][50][51] and Harish-Chandra[52][53] and physicists Eugene Wigner[54][55] and Valentine Bargmann[56][57][58] made substantial contributions both to general representation theory and in particular to the Lorentz group.[59] Physicist Paul Dirac was perhaps the first to manifestly knit everything together in a practical application of major lasting importance with the Dirac equation in 1928.[60][61][nb 16]

Technical introduction to finite-dimensional representation theory

The hidden section contains an outline of results used in the sequel.

The Lie algebra

Wilhelm Killing, Independent discoverer of Lie algebras. The simple Lie algebras were first classified by him in 1888.

According to the strategy, the irreducible complex linear representations of the complexification, of the Lie algebra of the Lorentz group are to be found. A convenient basis for is given by the three generators Ji of rotations and the three generators Ki of boosts. They are explicitly given in conventions and Lie algebra bases.

The Lie algebra is complexified, and the basis is changed to the components of[82]

The components of A = (A1, A2, A3) and B = (B1, B2, B3) separately satisfy the commutation relations of the Lie algebra and, moreover, they commute with each other,[83]

where i, j, k are indices which each take values 1, 2, 3, and εijk is the three-dimensional Levi-Civita symbol. Let and denote the complex linear span of A and B respectively.

One has the isomorphisms[84][nb 23]

 

 

 

 

(A1)

where is the complexification of

The utility of these isomorphisms comes from the fact that all irreducible representations of , and hence (see strategy) all irreducible complex linear representations of are known. According to the final conclusion in strategy, the irreducible complex linear representation of is isomorphic to one of the highest weight representations. These are explicitly given in complex linear representations of

The unitarian trick

Hermann Weyl, inventor the unitarian trick. There are several concepts and formulas in representation theory named after Weyl, e.g. the Weyl group and the Weyl character formula.
Photo courtesy of ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, Bildarchiv

The Lie algebra is the Lie algebra of It contains the compact subgroup SU(2) × SU(2) with Lie algebra The latter is a compact real form of Thus from the first statement of the unitarian trick, representations of SU(2) × SU(2) are in one-to-one correspondence with holomorphic representations of

By compactness, Peter–Weyl theorem applies to SU(2) × SU(2),[85] and hence orthonormality of irreducible characters may be appealed to. The irreducible unitary representations of SU(2) × SU(2) are precisely the tensor products of irreducible unitary representations of SU(2).[86]

By appeal to simple connectedness, the second statement of the unitarian trick is applied. The objects in the following list are in one-to-one correspondence:

Tensor products of representations appear at the Lie algebra level as either of[nb 24]

 

 

 

 

(A0)

where Id is the identity operator. Here, the latter interpretation, which follows from (G6), is intended. The highest weight representations of are indexed by μ for μ = 0, 1/2, 1, .... (The highest weights are actually 2μ = 0, 1, 2, ..., but the notation here is adapted to that of ) The tensor products of two such complex linear factors then form the irreducible complex linear representations of

Finally, the -linear representations of the real forms of the far left, , and the far right, [nb 25] in (A1) are obtained from the -linear representations of characterized in the previous paragraph.

The representations

The real linear representations for and follow here assuming the complex linear representations of are known. Explicit realizations and group representations are given later.

The (μ, ν)-representations of sl(2, C)

The complex linear representations of the complexification of obtained via isomorphisms in (A1), stand in one-to-one correspondence with the real linear representations of [87] The set of all, at least real linear, irreducible representations of are thus indexed by a pair (μ, ν). The complex linear ones, corresponding precisely to the complexification of the real linear representations, are of the form (μ, 0), while the conjugate linear ones are the (0, ν).[87] All others are real linear only. The linearity properties follow from the canonical injection, the far right in (A1), of into its complexification. Representations on the form (ν, ν) or (μ, ν) ⊕ (ν, μ) are given by real matrices (the latter are not irreducible). Explicitly, the real linear (μ, ν)-representations of are

where are the complex linear irreducible representations of and their complex conjugate representations. (The labeling is usually in the mathematics literature 0, 1, 2, , but half-integers are chosen here to conform with the labeling for the Lie algebra.) Here the tensor product is interpreted in the former sense of (A0). These representations are concretely realized below.

The (m, n)-representations of so(3; 1)

Via the displayed isomorphisms in (A1) and knowledge of the complex linear irreducible representations of upon solving for J and K, all irreducible representations of and, by restriction, those of are obtained. The representations of obtained this way are real linear (and not complex or conjugate linear) because the algebra is not closed upon conjugation, but they are still irreducible.[84] Since is semisimple,[84] all its representations can be built up as direct sums of the irreducible ones.

Thus the finite dimensional irreducible representations of the Lorentz algebra are classified by an ordered pair of half-integers m = μ and n = ν, conventionally written as one of

where V is a finite-dimensional vector space. These are, up to a similarity transformation, uniquely given by[nb 26]

 

 

 

 

(A2)

where 1n is the n-dimensional unit matrix and

are the (2n + 1)-dimensional irreducible representations of also termed spin matrices or angular momentum matrices. These are explicitly given as[88]

where δ denotes the Kronecker delta. In components, with ma, a′m, nb, b′n, the representations are given by[89]

Common representations
Irreducible representations for small (m, n). Dimension in parenthesis.
m = 0 1/2 1 3/2
n = 0 Scalar (1) Left-handed Weyl spinor (2) Self-dual 2-form (3) (4)
1/2 Right-handed Weyl spinor (2) 4-vector (4) (6) (8)
1 Anti-self-dual 2-form (3) (6) Traceless symmetric tensor (9) (12)
3/2 (4) (8) (12) (16)

Off-diagonal direct sums

Since for any irreducible representation for which mn it is essential to operate over the field of complex numbers, the direct sum of representations (m, n) and (n, m) have particular relevance to physics, since it permits to use linear operators over real numbers.

The group

The approach in this section is based on theorems that, in turn, are based on the fundamental Lie correspondence.[92] The Lie correspondence is in essence a dictionary between connected Lie groups and Lie algebras.[93] The link between them is the exponential mapping from the Lie algebra to the Lie group, denoted The general theory is summarized in technical introduction to finite-dimensional representation theory.

If for some vector space V is a representation, a representation Π of the connected component of G is defined by

 

 

 

 

(G2)

This definition applies whether the resulting representation is projective or not.

Surjectiveness of exponential map for SO(3, 1)

From a practical point of view, it is important whether the first formula in (G2) can be used for all elements of the group. It holds for all , however, in the general case, e.g. for , not all gG are in the image of exp.

But is surjective. One way to show this is to make use of the isomorphism the latter being the Möbius group. It is a quotient of (see the linked article). The quotient map is denoted with The map is onto.[94] Apply (Lie) with π being the differential of p at the identity. Then

Since the left hand side is surjective (both exp and p are), the right hand side is surjective and hence is surjective.[95] Finally, recycle the argument once more, but now with the known isomorphism between SO(3; 1)+ and to find that exp is onto for the connected component of the Lorentz group.

Fundamental group

The Lorentz group is doubly connected, i. e. π1(SO(3; 1)) is a group with two equivalence classes of loops as its elements.

Projective representations

Since π1(SO(3; 1)+) has two elements, some representations of the Lie algebra will yield projective representations.[98][nb 30] Once it is known whether a representation is projective, formula (G2) applies to all group elements and all representations, including the projective ones with the understanding that the representative of a group element will depend on which element in the Lie algebra (the X in (G2)) is used to represent the group element in the standard representation.

For the Lorentz group, the (m, n)-representation is projective when m + n is a half-integer. See the section spinors.

For a projective representation Π of SO(3; 1)+, it holds that[97]

 

 

 

 

(G5)

since any loop in SO(3; 1)+ traversed twice, due to the double connectedness, is contractible to a point, so that its homotopy class is that of a constant map. It follows that Π is a double-valued function. It is not possible to consistently chose a sign to obtain a continuous representation of all of SO(3; 1)+, but this is possible locally around any point.[37]

The covering group SL(2, C)

Consider as a real Lie algebra with basis

where the sigmas are the Pauli matrices. From the relations

 

 

 

 

(J1)

is obtained

 

 

 

 

(J2)

which are exactly on the form of the 3-dimensional version of the commutation relations for (see conventions and Lie algebra bases below). Thus, the map Jiji, Kiki, extended by linearity is an isomorphism. Since is simply connected, it is the universal covering group of SO(3; 1)+.

Non-surjectiveness of exponential mapping for SL(2, C)

This diagram shows the web of maps discussed in the text. Here V is a finite-dimensional vector space carrying representations of and is the exponential mapping, p is the covering map from onto SO(3; 1)+ and σ is the Lie algebra isomorphism induced by it. The maps Π, π and the two Φ are representations. the picture is only partially true when Π is projective.

The exponential mapping is not onto.[101] The matrix

 

 

 

 

(S6)

is in but there is no such that q = exp(Q).[nb 34]

In general, if g is an element of a connected Lie group G with Lie algebra then, by (Lie),

 

 

 

 

(S7)

The matrix q can be written

 

 

 

 

(S8)

Realization of representations of SL(2, C) and sl(2, C) and their Lie algebras

The complex linear representations of and are more straightforward to obtain than the representations. They can be (and usually are) written down from scratch. The holomorphic group representations (meaning the corresponding Lie algebra representation is complex linear) are related to the complex linear Lie algebra representations by exponentiation. The real linear representations of are exactly the (μ, ν)-representations. They can be exponentiated too. The (μ, 0)-representations are complex linear and are (isomorphic to) the highest weight-representations. These are usually indexed with only one integer (but half-integers are used here).

The mathematics convention is used in this section for convenience. Lie algebra elements differ by a factor of i and there is no factor of i in the exponential mapping compared to the physics convention used elsewhere. Let the basis of be[102]

 

 

 

 

(S1)

This choice of basis, and the notation, is standard in the mathematical literature.

Complex linear representations

The irreducible holomorphic (n + 1)-dimensional representations can be realized on the space of homogeneous polynomial of degree n in 2 variables [103][104] the elements of which are

The action of is given by[105][106]

 

 

 

 

(S2)

The associated -action is, using (G6) and the definition above, for the basis elements of [107]

 

 

 

 

(S5)

With a choice of basis for , these representations become matrix Lie algebras.

Real linear representations

The (μ, ν)-representations are realized on a space of polynomials in homogeneous of degree μ in and homogeneous of degree ν in [104] The representations are given by[108]

 

 

 

 

(S6)

By employing (G6) again it is found that

 

 

 

 

(S7)

In particular for the basis elements,:

 

 

 

 

(S8)

Properties of the (m, n) representations

The (m, n) representations, defined above via (A1) (as restrictions to the real form ) of tensor products of irreducible complex linear representations πm = μ and πn = ν of are irreducible, and they are the only irreducible representations.[85]

Dimension

The (m, n) representations are (2m + 1)(2n + 1)-dimensional.[110] This follows easiest from counting the dimensions in any concrete realization, such as the one given in representations of and . For a Lie general algebra the Weyl dimension formula,[111]

applies, where R+ is the set of positive roots, ρ is the highest weight, and δ is half the sum of the positive roots. The inner product is that of the Lie algebra invariant under the action of the Weyl group on the Cartan subalgebra. The roots (really elements of are via this inner product identified with elements of For the formula reduces to dim πμ = 2μ + 1 = 2m + 1, where the present notation must be taken into account. The highest weight is 2μ.[112] By taking tensor products, the result follows.

Faithfulness

If a representation Π of a Lie group G is not faithful, then N = ker Π is a nontrivial normal subgroup.[113] There are three relevant cases.

  1. N is non-discrete and abelian.
  2. N is non-discrete and non-abelian.
  3. N is discrete. In this case NZ, where Z is the center of G.[nb 36]

In the case of SO(3; 1)+, the first case is excluded since SO(3; 1)+ is semi-simple.[nb 37] The second case (and the first case) is excluded because SO(3; 1)+ is simple.[nb 38] For the third case, SO(3; 1)+ is isomorphic to the quotient But is the center of It follows that the center of SO(3; 1)+ is trivial, and this excludes the third case. The conclusion is that every representation Π : SO(3; 1)+ → GL(V) and every projective representation Π : SO(3; 1)+ → PGL(W) for V, W finite-dimensional vector spaces are faithful.

By using the fundamental Lie correspondence, the statements and the reasoning above translate directly to Lie algebras with (abelian) nontrivial non-discrete normal subgroups replaced by (one-dimensional) nontrivial ideals in the Lie algebra,[114] and the center of SO(3; 1)+ replaced by the center of The center of any semisimple Lie algebra is trivial[115] and is semi-simple and simple, and hence has no non-trivial ideals.

A related fact is that if the corresponding representation of is faithful, then the representation is projective. Conversely, if the representation is non-projective, then the corresponding representation is not faithful, but is 2:1.

Non-unitarity

The (m, n) Lie algebra representation is not Hermitian. Accordingly, the corresponding (projective) representation of the group is never unitary.[nb 39] This is due to the non-compactness of the Lorentz group. In fact, a connected simple non-compact Lie group cannot have any nontrivial unitary finite-dimensional representations.[37] There is a topological proof of this.[116] Let u : G → GL(V), where V is finite-dimensional, be a continuous unitary representation of the non-compact connected simple Lie group G. Then u(G) ⊂ U(V) ⊂ GL(V) where U(V) is the compact subgroup of GL(V) consisting of unitary transformations of V. The kernel of u is a normal subgroup of G. Since G is simple, ker u is either all of G, in which case u is trivial, or ker u is trivial, in which case u is faithful. In the latter case u is a diffeomorphism onto its image,[117] u(G) ≅ G and u(G) is a Lie group. This would mean that u(G) is an embedded non-compact Lie subgroup of the compact group U(V). This is impossible with the subspace topology on u(G) ⊂ U(V) since all embedded Lie subgroups of a Lie group are closed[118] If u(G) were closed, it would be compact,[nb 40] and then G would be compact,[nb 41] contrary to assumption.[nb 42]

In the case of the Lorentz group, this can also be seen directly from the definitions. The representations of A and B used in the construction are Hermitian. This means that J is Hermitian, but K is anti-Hermitian.[119] The non-unitarity is not a problem in quantum field theory, since the objects of concern are not required to have a Lorentz-invariant positive definite norm.[120]

Restriction to SO(3)

The (m, n) representation is, however, unitary when restricted to the rotation subgroup SO(3), but these representations are not irreducible as representations of SO(3). A Clebsch–Gordan decomposition can be applied showing that an (m, n) representation have SO(3)-invariant subspaces of highest weight (spin) m + n, m + n − 1, … , |mn|,[121] where each possible highest weight (spin) occurs exactly once. A weight subspace of highest weight (spin) j is (2j + 1)-dimensional. So for example, the (1/2, 1/2) representation has spin 1 and spin 0 subspaces of dimension 3 and 1 respectively.

Since the angular momentum operator is given by J = A + B, the highest spin in quantum mechanics of the rotation sub-representation will be (m + n)ℏ and the "usual" rules of addition of angular momenta and the formalism of 3-j symbols, 6-j symbols, etc. applies.[122]

Spinors

It is the SO(3)-invariant subspaces of the irreducible representations that determine whether a representation has spin. From the above paragraph, it is seen that the (m, n) representation has spin if m + n is half-integral. The simplest are ( 1/2, 0) and (0,  1/2), the Weyl-spinors of dimension 2. Then, for example, (0,  3/2) and (1,  1/2) are a spin representations of dimensions 23/2 + 1 = 4 and (2 + 1)(21/2 + 1) = 6 respectively. Note that, according to the above paragraph, there are subspaces with spin both 3/2 and 1/2 in the last two cases, so these representations cannot likely represent a single physical particle which must be well-behaved under SO(3). It cannot be ruled out in general, however, that representations with multiple SO(3) subrepresentations with different spin can represent physical particles with well-defined spin. It may be that there is a suitable relativistic wave equation that projects out unphysical components, leaving only a single spin.[123]

Construction of pure spin n/2 representations for any n (under SO(3)) from the irreducible representations involves taking tensor products of the Dirac-representation with a non-spin representation, extraction of a suitable subspace, and finally imposing differential constraints.[124]

Dual representations

The root system A1 × A1 of

The following theorems are applied to examine whether the dual representation of an irreducible representation is isomorphic to the original representation:

  1. The set of weights of the dual representation of an irreducible representation of a semisimple Lie algebra is, including multiplicities, the negative of the set of weights for the original representation.[125]
  2. Two irreducible representations are isomorphic if and only if they have the same highest weight.[nb 43]
  3. For each semisimple Lie algebra there exists a unique element w0 of the Weyl group such that if μ is a dominant integral weight, then w0 ⋅ (−μ) is again a dominant integral weight.[126]
  4. If is an irreducible representation with highest weight μ0, then has highest weight w0 ⋅ (−μ).[126]

Here, the elements of the Weyl group are considered as orthogonal transformations, acting by matrix multiplication, on the real vector space of roots. If I is an element of the Weyl group of a semisimple Lie algebra, then w0 = −I. In the case of the Weyl group is W = {I, −I}.[127] It follows that each πμ, μ = 0, 1, is isomorphic to its dual The root system of is shown in the figure to the right.[nb 44] The Weyl group is generated by where is reflection in the plane orthogonal to γ as γ ranges over all roots.[nb 45] Inspection shows that wαwβ = −I so IW. Using the fact that if π, σ are Lie algebra representations and πσ, then Π ≅ Σ,[128] the conclusion for SO(3; 1)+ is

Complex conjugate representations

If π is a representation of a Lie algebra, then is a representation, where the bar denotes entry-wise complex conjugation in the representative matrices. This follows from that complex conjugation commutes with addition and multiplication.[129] In general, every irreducible representation π of can be written uniquely as π = π+ + π, where[130]

with holomorphic (complex linear) and anti-holomorphic (conjugate linear). For since is holomorphic, is anti-holomorphic. Direct examination of the explicit expressions for and in equation (S8) below shows that they are holomorphic and anti-holomorphic respectively. Closer examination of the expression (S8) also allows for identification of and for as

Using the above identities (interpreted as pointwise addition of functions), for SO(3; 1)+ yields

where the statement for the group representations follow from exp(X) = exp(X). It follows that the irreducible representations (m, n) have real matrix representatives if and only if m = n. Reducible representations on the form (m, n) ⊕ (n, m) have real matrices too.

The adjoint representation, the Clifford algebra, and the Dirac spinor representation

Richard Brauer and wife Ilse 1970. Brauer generalized the spin representations of Lie algebras sitting inside Clifford algebras to spin higher than 1/2.
Photo courtesy of MFO.

In general representation theory, if (π, V) is a representation of a Lie algebra then there is an associated representation of on End(V), also denoted π, given by

 

 

 

 

(I1)

Likewise, a representation (Π, V) of a group G yields a representation Π on End(V) of G, still denoted Π, given by[131]

 

 

 

 

(I2)

If π and Π are the standard representations on and if the action is restricted to then the two above representations are the adjoint representation of the Lie algebra and the adjoint representation of the group respectively. The corresponding representations (some or ) always exist for any matrix Lie group, and are paramount for investigation of the representation theory in general, and for any given Lie group in particular.

Applying this to the Lorentz group, if (Π, V) is a projective representation, then direct calculation using (G5) shows that the induced representation on End(V) is a proper representation, i.e. a representation without phase factors.

In quantum mechanics this means that if (π, H) or (Π, H) is a representation acting on some Hilbert space H, then the corresponding induced representation acts on the set of linear operators on H. As an example, the induced representation of the projective spin (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2) representation on End(H) is the non-projective 4-vector (1/2, 1/2) representation.[132]

For simplicity, consider only the "discrete part" of End(H), that is, given a basis for H, the set of constant matrices of various dimension, including possibly infinite dimensions. The induced 4-vector representation of above on this simplified End(H) has an invariant 4-dimensional subspace that is spanned by the four gamma matrices.[133] (The metric convention is different in the linked article.) In a corresponding way, the complete Clifford algebra of spacetime, whose complexification is generated by the gamma matrices decomposes as a direct sum of representation spaces of a scalar irreducible representation (irrep), the (0, 0), a pseudoscalar irrep, also the (0, 0), but with parity inversion eigenvalue −1, see the next section below, the already mentioned vector irrep, (1/2, 1/2), a pseudovector irrep, (1/2, 1/2) with parity inversion eigenvalue +1 (not −1), and a tensor irrep, (1, 0) ⊕ (0, 1).[134] The dimensions add up to 1 + 1 + 4 + 4 + 6 = 16. In other words,

 

 

 

 

(I3)

where, as is customary, a representation is confused with its representation space.

The (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2) spin representation

The six-dimensional representation space of the tensor (1, 0) ⊕ (0, 1)-representation inside has two roles. The[135]

 

 

 

 

(I4)

where are the gamma matrices, the sigmas, only 6 of which are non-zero due to antisymmetry of the bracket, span the tensor representation space. Moreover, they have the commutation relations of the Lorentz Lie algebra,[136]

 

 

 

 

(I5)

and hence constitute a representation (in addition to spanning a representation space) sitting inside the (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2) spin representation. For details, see bispinor and Dirac algebra.

The conclusion is that every element of the complexified in End(H) (i.e. every complex 4×4 matrix) has well defined Lorentz transformation properties. In addition, it has a spin-representation of the Lorentz Lie algebra, which upon exponentiation becomes a spin representation of the group, acting on making it a space of bispinors.

Reducible representations

There is a multitude of other representations that can be deduced from the irreducible ones, such as those obtained by taking direct sums, tensor products, and quotients of the irreducible representations. Other methods of obtaining representations include the restriction of a representation of a larger group containing the Lorentz group, e.g. and the Poincaré group. These representations are in general not irreducible.

The Lorentz group and its Lie algebra have the complete reducibility property. This means that every representation reduces to a direct sum of irreducible representations. The reducible representations will therefore not be discussed.

Space inversion and time reversal

The (possibly projective) (m, n) representation is irreducible as a representation SO(3; 1)+, the identity component of the Lorentz group, in physics terminology the proper orthochronous Lorentz group. If m = n it can be extended to a representation of all of O(3; 1), the full Lorentz group, including space parity inversion and time reversal. The representations (m, n) ⊕ (n, m) can be extended likewise.[137]

Space parity inversion

For space parity inversion, the adjoint action AdP of P ∈ SO(3; 1) on is considered, where P is the standard representative of space parity inversion, P = diag(1, −1, −1, −1), given by

 

 

 

 

(F1)

It is these properties of K and J under P that motivate the terms vector for K and pseudovector or axial vector for J. In a similar way, if π is any representation of and Π is its associated group representation, then Π(SO(3; 1)+) acts on the representation of π by the adjoint action, π(X) ↦ Π(g) π(X) Π(g)−1 for g ∈ SO(3; 1)+. If P is to be included in Π, then consistency with (F1) requires that

 

 

 

 

(F2)

holds, where A and B are defined as in the first section. This can hold only if Ai and Bi have the same dimensions, i.e. only if m = n. When mn then (m, n) ⊕ (n, m) can be extended to an irreducible representation of SO(3; 1)+, the orthochronous Lorentz group. The parity reversal representative Π(P) does not come automatically with the general construction of the (m, n) representations. It must be specified separately. The matrix β = iγ0 (or a multiple of modulus −1 times it) may be used in the (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2)[138] representation.

If parity is included with a minus sign (the 1×1 matrix [−1]) in the (0,0) representation, it is called a pseudoscalar representation.

Time reversal

Time reversal T = diag(−1, 1, 1, 1), acts similarly on by[139]

 

 

 

 

(F3)

By explicitly including a representative for T, as well as one for P, a representation of the full Lorentz group O(3; 1) is obtained. A subtle problem appears however in application to physics, in particular quantum mechanics. When considering the full Poincaré group, four more generators, the Pμ, in addition to the Ji and Ki generate the group. These are interpreted as generators of translations. The time-component P0 is the Hamiltonian H. The operator T satisfies the relation[140]

 

 

 

 

(F4)

in analogy to the relations above with replaced by the full Poincaré algebra. By just cancelling the i's, the result THT−1 = −H would imply that for every state Ψ with positive energy E in a Hilbert space of quantum states with time-reversal invariance, there would be a state Π(T−1 with negative energy E. Such states do not exist. The operator Π(T) is therefore chosen antilinear and antiunitary, so that it anticommutes with i, resulting in THT−1 = H, and its action on Hilbert space likewise becomes antilinear and antiunitary.[141] It may be expressed as the composition of complex conjugation with multiplication by a unitary matrix.[142] This is mathematically sound, see Wigner's theorem, but with very strict requirements on terminology, Π is not a representation.

When constructing theories such as QED which is invariant under space parity and time reversal, Dirac spinors may be used, while theories that do not, such as the electroweak force, must be formulated in terms of Weyl spinors. The Dirac representation, (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2), is usually taken to include both space parity and time inversions. Without space parity inversion, it is not an irreducible representation.

The third discrete symmetry entering in the CPT theorem along with P and T, charge conjugation symmetry C, has nothing directly to do with Lorentz invariance.[143]

Action on function spaces

If V is a vector space of functions of a finite number of variables n, then the action on a scalar function given by

 

 

 

 

(H1)

produces another function ΠfV. Here Πx is an n-dimensional representation, and Π is a possibly infinite-dimensional representation. A special case of this construction is when V is a space of functions defined on the a linear group G itself, viewed as a n-dimensional manifold embedded in (with m the dimension of the matrices).[144] This is the setting in which the Peter–Weyl theorem and the Borel–Weil theorem are formulated. The former demonstrates the existence of a Fourier decomposition of functions on a compact group into characters of finite-dimensional representations.[85] The latter theorem, providing more explicit representations, makes use of the unitarian trick to yield representations of complex non-compact groups, e.g.

The following exemplifies action of the Lorentz group and the rotation subgroup on some function spaces.

Euclidean rotations

The subgroup SO(3) of three-dimensional Euclidean rotations has an infinite-dimensional representation on the Hilbert space

where are the spherical harmonics. An arbitrary square integrable function f one the unit sphere can be expressed as[145]

 

 

 

 

(H2)

where the flm are generalized Fourier coefficients.

The Lorentz group action restricts to that of SO(3) and is expressed as

 

 

 

 

(H4)

where the Dl are obtained from the representatives of odd dimension of the generators of rotation.

The Möbius group

The identity component of the Lorentz group is isomorphic to the Möbius group M. This group can be thought of as conformal mappings of either the complex plane or, via stereographic projection, the Riemann sphere. In this way, the Lorentz group itself can be thought of as acting conformally on the complex plane or on the Riemann sphere.

In the plane, a Möbius transformation characterized by the complex numbers a, b, c, d acts on the plane according to[146]

.

 

 

 

 

(M1)

and can be represented by complex matrices

 

 

 

 

(M2)

since multiplication by a nonzero complex scalar does not change f. These are elements of and are unique up to a sign (since ±Πf give the same f), hence

The Riemann P-functions

The Riemann P-functions, solutions of Riemann's differential equation, are an example of a set of functions that transform among themselves under the action of the Lorentz group. The Riemann P-functions are expressed as[147]

 

 

 

 

(T1)

where the a,  b,  c,  α,  β,  γ,  α′,  β′,  γ′ are complex constants. The P-function on the right hand side can be expressed using standard hypergeometric functions. The connection is[148]

 

 

 

 

(T2)

The set of constants 0, ∞, 1 in the upper row on the left hand side are the regular singular points of the Gauss' hypergeometric equation.[149] Its exponents, i. e. solutions of the indicial equation, for expansion around the singular point 0 are 0 and 1 − c ,corresponding to the two linearly independent solutions,[nb 46] and for expansion around the singular point 1 they are 0 and cab.[150] Similarly, the exponents for are a and b for the two solutions.[151]

One has thus

 

 

 

 

(T3)

where the condition (sometimes called Riemann's identity)[152]

on the exponents of the solutions of Riemann's differential equation has been used to define γ.

The first set of constants on the left hand side in (T1), a, b, c denotes the regular singular points of Riemann's differential equation. The second set, α, β, γ, are the corresponding exponents at a, b, c for one of the two linearly independent solutions, and, accordingly, α′, β′, γ′ are exponents at a, b, c for the second solution.

Define an action of the Lorentz group on the set of all Riemann P-functions by first setting

 

 

 

 

(T4)

where A,  B,  C,  D are the entries in

 

 

 

 

(T5)

for Λ = p(λ) ∈ SO(3; 1)+ a Lorentz transformation.

Define

 

 

 

 

(T6)

where P is a Riemann P-function. The resulting function is again a Riemann P-function. The effect of the Möbius transformation of the argument is that of shifting the poles to new locations, hence changing the critical points, but there is no change in the exponents of the differential equation the new function satisfies. The new function is expressed as

 

 

 

 

(T6)

where

 

 

 

 

(T7)

Infinite-dimensional unitary representations

History

The Lorentz group SO(3; 1)+ and its double cover also have infinite dimensional unitary representations, studied independently by Bargmann (1947), Gelfand & Naimark (1947) and Harish-Chandra (1947) at the instigation of Paul Dirac.[153][154] This trail of development begun with Dirac (1936) where he devised matrices U and B necessary for description of higher spin (compare Dirac matrices), elaborated upon by Fierz (1939), see also Fierz & Pauli (1939), and proposed precursors of the Bargmann-Wigner equations.[155] In Dirac (1945) he proposed a concrete infinite-dimensional representation space whose elements were called expansors as a generalization of tensors.[nb 47] These ideas were incorporated by HarishChandra and expanded with expinors as an infinite-dimensional generalization of spinors in his 1947 paper.

The Plancherel formula for these groups was first obtained by Gelfand and Naimark through involved calculations. The treatment was subsequently considerably simplified by Harish-Chandra (1951) and Gelfand & Graev (1953), based on an analogue for of the integration formula of Hermann Weyl for compact Lie groups.[156] Elementary accounts of this approach can be found in Rühl (1970) and Knapp (2001).

The theory of spherical functions for the Lorentz group, required for harmonic analysis on the hyperboloid model of 3-dimensional hyperbolic space sitting in Minkowski space is considerably easier than the general theory. It only involves representations from the spherical principal series and can be treated directly, because in radial coordinates the Laplacian on the hyperboloid is equivalent to the Laplacian on This theory is discussed in Takahashi (1963), Helgason (1968), Helgason (2000) and the posthumous text of Jorgenson & Lang (2008).

Principal series for SL(2, C)

The principal series, or unitary principal series, are the unitary representations induced from the one-dimensional representations of the lower triangular subgroup B of Since the one-dimensional representations of B correspond to the representations of the diagonal matrices, with non-zero complex entries z and z−1, they thus have the form

for k an integer, ν real and with z = re. The representations are irreducible; the only repetitions, i.e. isomorphisms of representations, occur when k is replaced by k. By definition the representations are realized on L2 sections of line bundles on which is isomorphic to the Riemann sphere. When k = 0, these representations constitute the so-called spherical principal series.

The restriction of a principal series to the maximal compact subgroup K = SU(2) of G can also be realized as an induced representation of K using the identification G/B = K/T, where T = BK is the maximal torus in K consisting of diagonal matrices with | z | = 1. It is the representation induced from the 1-dimensional representation zkT, and is independent of ν. By Frobenius reciprocity, on K they decompose as a direct sum of the irreducible representations of K with dimensions |k| + 2m + 1 with m a non-negative integer.

Using the identification between the Riemann sphere minus a point and the principal series can be defined directly on by the formula[157]

Irreducibility can be checked in a variety of ways:

.

Complementary series for SL(2, C)

The for 0 < t < 2, the complementary series is defined on for the inner product[160]

with the action given by[161][162]

The representations in the complementary series are irreducible and pairwise non-isomorphic. As a representation of K, each is isomorphic to the Hilbert space direct sum of all the odd dimensional irreducible representations of K = SU(2). Irreducibility can be proved by analyzing the action of on the algebraic sum of these subspaces[9][159] or directly without using the Lie algebra.[163][164]

Plancherel theorem for SL(2, C)

The only irreducible unitary representations of are the principal series, the complementary series and the trivial representation. Since I acts as (−1)k on the principal series and trivially on the remainder, these will give all the irreducible unitary representations of the Lorentz group, provided k is taken to be even.

To decompose the left regular representation of G on only the principal series are required. This immediately yields the decomposition on the subrepresentations the left regular representation of the Lorentz group, and the regular representation on 3-dimensional hyperbolic space. (The former only involves principal series representations with k even and the latter only those with k = 0.)

The left and right regular representation λ and ρ are defined on by

Now if f is an element of Cc(G), the operator defined by

is Hilbert–Schmidt. Define a Hilbert space H by

where

and denotes the Hilbert space of Hilbert–Schmidt operators on [nb 48] Then the map U defined on Cc(G) by

extends to a unitary of onto H.

The map U satisfies the intertwining property

If f1, f2 are in Cc(G) then by unitarity

Thus if denotes the convolution of and and then[165]

The last two displayed formulas are usually referred to as the Plancherel formula and the Fourier inversion formula respectively. The Plancherel formula extends to all By a theorem of Jacques Dixmier and Paul Malliavin, every smooth compactly supported function on is a finite sum of convolutions of similar functions, the inversion formula holds for such f. It can be extended to much wider classes of functions satisfying mild differentiability conditions.[85]

Classification of representations of SO(3, 1)

The strategy followed in the classification of the irreducible infinite-dimensional representations is, in analogy to the finite-dimensional case, to assume they exist, and to investigate their properties. Thus first assume that an irreducible strongly continuous infinite-dimensional representation ΠH on a Hilbert space H of SO(3; 1)+ is at hand.[166] Since SO(3) is a subgroup, ΠH is a representation of it as well. Each irreducible subrepresentation of SO(3) is finite-dimensional, and the SO(3) representation is reducible into a direct sum of irreducible finite-dimensional unitary representations of SO(3) if ΠH is unitary.[167]

The steps are the following:[168]

  1. Chose a suitable basis of common eigenvectors of J2 and J3.
  2. Compute matrix elements of J1, J2, J3 and K1, K2, K3.
  3. Enforce Lie algebra commutation relations.
  4. Require unitarity together with orthonormality of the basis.[nb 49]

Step 1

One suitable choice of basis and labeling is given by

If this were a finite-dimensional representation, then j0 would correspond the lowest occurring eigenvalue j(j + 1) of J2 in the representation, equal to |mn|, and j1 would correspond to the highest occurring eigenvalue, equal to m + n. In the infinite-dimensional case, j0 ≥ 0 retains this meaning, but j1 does not.[90] For simplicity, it is assumed that a given j occurs at most once in a given representation (this is the case for finite-dimensional representations), and it can be shown[169] that the assumption is possible to avoid (with a slightly more complicated calculation) with the same results.

Step 2

The next step is to compute the matrix elements of the operators J1, J2, J3 and K1, K2, K3 forming the basis of the Lie algebra of The matrix elements of and (the complexified Lie algebra is understood) are known from the representation theory of the rotation group, and are given by[170][171]

where the labels j0 and j1 have been dropped since they are the same for all basis vectors in the representation.

Due to the commutation relations

the triple (Ki, Ki, Ki) ≡ K is a vector operator[172] and the Wigner–Eckart theorem[173] applies for computation of matrix elements between the states represented by the chosen basis.[174] The matrix elements of

where the superscript (1) signifies that the defined quantities are the components of a spherical tensor operator of rank k = 1 (which explains the factor 2 as well) and the subscripts 0, ±1 are referred to as q in formulas below, are given by[175]

Here the first factors on the right hand sides are Clebsch–Gordan coefficients for coupling j with k to get j. The second factors are the reduced matrix elements. They do not depend on m, m or q, but depend on j, j and, of course, K. For a complete list of non-vanishing equations, see Harish-Chandra (1947, p. 375).

Step 3

The next step is to demand that the Lie algebra relations hold, i.e. that

This results in a set of equations[176] for which the solutions are[177]

where

Step 4

The imposition of the requirement of unitarity of the corresponding representation of the group restricts the possible values for the arbitrary complex numbers j0 and ξj. Unitarity of the group representation translates to the requirement of the Lie algebra representatives being Hermitian, meaning

This translates to[178]

leading to[179]

where βj is the angle of Bj on polar form. For |Bj| ≠ 0 follows and is chosen by convention. There are two possible cases:

This is the principal series. Its elements are denoted
Since B0 = Bj0, B2
j
is real and positive for j = 1, 2, ... , leading to −1 ≤ ν ≤ 1. This is complementary series. Its elements are denoted (0, ν), −1 ≤ ν ≤ 1.

This shows that the representations of above are all infinite-dimensional irreducible unitary representations.

Explicit formulas

Conventions and Lie algebra bases

The metric of choice is given by η = diag(−1, 1, 1, 1), and the physics convention for Lie algebras and the exponential mapping is used. These choices are arbitrary, but once they are made, fixed. One possible choice of basis for the Lie algebra is, in the 4-vector representation, given by:

The commutation relations of the Lie algebra are:[182]

In three-dimensional notation, these are[183]

The choice of basis above satisfies the relations, but other choices are possible. The multiple use of the symbol J above and in the sequel should be observed.

Weyl spinors and bispinors

Solutions to the Dirac equation transform under the (1/2, 0) ⊕ (0, 1/2)-representation. Dirac discovered the gamma matrices in his search for a relativistically invariant equation, then already known to mathematicians.[133]

By taking, in turn, m = 1/2, n = 0 and m = 0, n = 1/2 and by setting

in the general expression (G1), and by using the trivial relations 11 = 1 and J(0) = 0, it follows

 

 

 

 

(W1)

These are the left-handed and right-handed Weyl spinor representations. They act by matrix multiplication on 2-dimensional complex vector spaces (with a choice of basis) VL and VR, whose elements ΨL and ΨR are called left- and right-handed Weyl spinors respectively. Given

their direct sum as representations is formed,[184]

 

 

 

 

(D1)

This is, up to a similarity transformation, the (1/2,0) ⊕ (0,1/2) Dirac spinor representation of It acts on the 4-component elements L, ΨR) of (VLVR), called bispinors, by matrix multiplication. The representation may be obtained in a more general and basis independent way using Clifford algebras. These expressions for bispinors and Weyl spinors all extend by linearity of Lie algebras and representations to all of Expressions for the group representations are obtained by exponentiation.

See also

Remarks

  1. The way in which it enters may take many shapes depending on the theory at hand. While not being the present topic, some details will be provided in footnotes labeled "nb", and in the section applications.
  2. Weinberg 2002, p. 1 "If it turned out that a system could not be described by a quantum field theory, it would be a sensation; if it turned out it did not obey the rules of quantum mechanics and relativity, it would be a cataclysm."
  3. In 1945 Harish-Chandra came to see Dirac in Cambridge. He became convinced that he was not suitable for theoretical physics. Harish-Chandra had found an error in a proof by Dirac in his work on the Lorentz group. Dirac said "I am not interested in proofs but only interested in what nature does."

    Harish-Chandra later wrote "This remark confirmed my growing conviction that I did not have the mysterious sixth sense which one needs in order to succeed in physics and I soon decided to move over to mathematics."

    Dirac did however suggest the topic of his thesis, the classification of the irreducible infinite-dimensional representations of the Lorentz group.

    See Dalitz & Peierls 1986

  4. It is tacitly always assumed that each inertial frame has a dedicated Lorentz observer, I. e. someone who has, in principle, a complete record (i. e. coordinates!) of every event as observed in that frame.
  5. It isn't actually required that the mapping is one-to-one. It is merely required that the mapping is a group homomorphism, i. e. Π(gh) = Π(g)Π(h) into some GL(V) the general linear group of some vector space V. (The vector space V is allowed to be infinite-dimensional, e.g a Hilbert space H, in which case one speaks of B(H), linear operators on H instead of GL(V).
  6. In an open set of spacetime, there are only two degrees of freedom. Introduction of the four-potential yields nominally four degrees of freedom. The field equations and gauge invariance each remove one degree of freedom.
  7. This transformation is usually expressed differently, see e.g. transformation of the electromagnetic field. That method can be traced converted to applying a 6 × 6-matrix like here and vice versa since the field tensor has 6 independent components.
  8. There may be representations of uncountable dimension. These are less well behaved (in particular non-unitary) and are not covered here.
  9. It may happen that the multiplication of two representative infinite-dimensional matrices is ill-defined. The right composition rule can be verified by other means though.
  10. See formula (1) in S-matrix#From free particle states for how free multi-particle states transform.
  11. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.1.4-5. Weinberg deduces the necessity of creation and annihilation operators from another consideration, the cluster decomposition principle, Weinberg (2002, Chapter 4.)
  12. A prescription for how the particle should behave under CPT symmetry may be required as well.
  13. For instance, there are versions (free field equations, i.e. without interaction terms) of the Klein–Gordon equation, the Dirac equation, the Maxwell equations, the Proca equation, the Rarita–Schwinger equation, and the Einstein field equations that can systematically be deduced by starting from a given representation of the Lorentz group. In general, these are collectively the quantum field theory versions of the Bargmann–Wigner equations.

    See Weinberg (2002, Chapter 5), Tung (1985, Section 10.5.2) and references given in these works.

    It should be remarked that high spin theories (s > 1) encounter difficulties. See Weinberg (2002, Section 5.8), on general (m, n) fields, where this is discussed in some depth, and references therein. High spin particles do without a doubt exist, e.g. nuclei, the known ones are just not elementary.

  14. For part of their representation theory, see Bekaert & Boulanger (2006), which is dedicated to representation theory of the Poincare group. These representations are obtained by the method of induced representations or, in physics parlance, the method of the little group, pioneered by Wigner in 1939 for this type of group and put on firm mathematical footing by George Mackey in the fifties.
  15. Hall (2015, Section 4.4.)
    One says that a group has the complete reducibility property if every representation decomposes as a direct sum of irreducible representations.
  16. Dirac suggested the topic of Wigner (1939) as early as 1928 (as acknowledged in Wigner's paper). He also published one of the first papers on explicit infinite-dimensional unitary representations in Dirac (1945) (Langlands 1985), and suggested the topic for Harish-Chandra's thesis classifying irreducible infinite-dimensional representations (Dalitz & Peierls 1986).
  17. This approach is used heavily for classical Lie algebras in Fulton & Harris (1991).
  18. The latter are all unitary, or can be made unitary, see footnote in non-unitarity. This is the origin of the name of the trick Knapp (2001, p. 29).
  19. Not all groups have matrix representations. For example, the universal covering group of the linear Lie group SL(2, R) has none. See Hall (2015, Proposition 5.16.) A quotient of a matrix Lie group need not be linear. This is e.g. the case for the quotient of the Heisenberg group by a discrete subgroup of its center. See Hall (2015, Section 4.8.)
    However, if G is a compact Lie group, it is representable as a matrix Lie group. This is a consequence of the Peter–Weyl theorem. See Rossmann (2002, Section 6.2.)
  20. It's a rather deep fact that all finite-dimensional Lie algebras have matrix representations. This is the content of Ado's theorem. See Hall (2015, Section 5.10.)
  21. The exponential mapping need not be onto and the image is in those cases not a group, see e.g. non-surjectiveness of exponential mapping for SL(2, C) below. Therefore one takes all finite products of elements in the image in order to obtain a group, which necessarily must be closed under multiplication.
  22. Hall 2003, Equation 2.16. Due to the physicist conventions, the formula here differs with a factor of i in the exponent.
  23. Knapp 2001 The rather mysterious looking third isomorphism is proved in chapter 2, paragraph 4.
  24. Tensor products of representations, πg ⊗ πh of can, when both factors come from the same Lie algebra either be thought of as a representation of or .
  25. When complexifying a complex Lie algebra, it should be thought of as a real Lie algebra of real dimension twice its complex dimension. Likewise, a real form may actually also be complex as is the case here.
  26. Combine Weinberg (2002, Equations 5.6.7-8, 5.6.14-15) with Hall (2015, Proposition 4.18) about Lie algebra representations of group tensor product representations.
  27. The "traceless" property can be expressed as Sαβgαβ = 0, or Sαα = 0, or Sαβgαβ = 0 depending on the presentation of the field: covariant, mixed, and contravariant respectively.
  28. This doesn't necessarily come symmetric directly from the Lagrangian by using Noether's theorem, but it can be symmetrized as the Belinfante–Rosenfeld stress–energy tensor.
  29. This is provided parity is a symmetry. Else there would be two flavors, (3/2, 0) and (0, 3/2) in analogy with neutrinos.
  30. The terminology differs between mathematics and physics. In the linked article term projective representation has a slightly different meaning than in physics, where a projective representation is though of as a local section (a local inverse) of the covering map from the covering group onto the group being covered, composed with a proper representation of the covering group. Since this can be done (locally) continuously in two ways in the case at hand as explained below, the terminology of a double-valued or two-valued representation is natural.
  31. In particular, A commutes with the Pauli matrices, hence with all of SU(2) making Schur's lemma applicable.
  32. Meaning the kernel is trivial, to see this recall that the kernel of a Lie algebra homomorphism is an ideal and hence a subspace. Since p is 2:1 and both and SO(3; 1)+ are 6-dimensional, the kernel must be 0-dimensional, hence {0}.
  33. The exponential map is one-to-one in a neighborhood of the identity in hence the composition where σ is the Lie algebra isomorphism, is onto an open neighborhood U ⊂ SO(3; 1)+ containing the identity. Such a neighborhood generates the connected component.
  34. Rossmann 2002 From Example 4 in section 2.1 : This can be seen as follows. The matrix q has eigenvalues {-1, -1} , but it is not diagonalizable. If q = exp(Q), then Q has eigenvalues λ, −λ with λ = + 2πik for some k because elements of are traceless. But then Q is diagonalizable, hence q is diagonalizable, which is a contradiction.
  35. Rossmann 2002, Proposition 10, paragraph 6.3. This is easiest proved using character theory.
  36. Any discrete normal subgroup of a path connected group G is contained in the center Z of G.
    Hall 2015, Exercise 11, chapter 1.
  37. A semisimple Lie group does not have any non-discrete normal abelian subgroups. This can be taken as the definition of semisimplicity.
  38. A simple group does not have any non-discrete normal subgroups.
  39. By contrast, there is a trick, also called Weyl's unitarian trick, but unrelated to the unitarian trick of above showing that all finite-dimensional representations are, or can be made, unitary. If (Π, V) is a finite-dimensional representation of a compact Lie group G and if (·, ·) is any inner product on V, define a new inner product (·, ·)Π by (x, y)Π = ∫G(Π(g)x, Π(g)y (g), where μ is Haar measure on G. Then Π is unitary with respect to (·, ·)Π. See Hall (2015, Theorem 4.28.)
    Another consequence is that every compact Lie group has the complete reducibility property, meaning that all its finite-dimensional representations decompose as a direct sum of irreducible representations. Hall (2015, Definition 4.24., Theorem 4.28.)
    It is also true that there are no infinite-dimensional irreducible unitary representations of compact Lie groups, stated, but not proved in Greiner & Müller (1994, Section 15.2.).
  40. Lee 2003 Lemma A.17 (c). Closed subsets of compact sets are compact.
  41. Lee 2003 Lemma A.17 (a). If f : XY is continuous, X is compact, then f(X) is compact.
  42. The non-unitarity is a vital ingredient in the proof of the Coleman–Mandula theorem, which has the implication that, contrary to in non-relativistic theories, there can exist no ordinary symmetry relating particles of different spin. See Weinberg (2000)
  43. This is one of the conclusions of Cartan's theorem, the theorem of the highest weight.
    Hall (2015, Theorems 9.45.)
  44. Hall 2015, Section 8.2 The root system is the union of two copies of A1, where each copy resides in its own dimensions in the embedding vector space.
  45. Rossmann 2002 This definition is equivalent to the definition in terms of the connected Lie group whose Lie algebra is the Lie algebra of the root system under consideration.
  46. See Simmons (1972, Section 30.) for precise conditions under which two Frobenius method yields two linearly independent solutions. If the exponents do not differ by an integer, this is always the case.
  47. "This is as close as one comes to the source of the theory of infinite-dimensional representations of semisimple and reductive groups...", Langlands (1985, p. 204.), referring to an introductory passage in Dirac's 1945 paper.
  48. Note that for a Hilbert space H, HS(H) may be identified canonically with the Hilbert space tensor product of H and its conjugate space.
  49. If finite-dimensionality is demanded, the results is the (m, n) representations, see Tung (1985, Problem 10.8.) If neither is demanded, then a broader classification of all irreducible representations is obtained, including the finite-dimensional and the unitary ones. This approach is taken in Harish-Chandra (1947).

Notes

  1. Bargmann & Wigner 1948
  2. Bekaert & Boulanger 2006
  3. 1 2 Rossmann 2002, Section 6.1.
  4. Misner, Thorne & Wheeler 1973
  5. Weinberg 2002, Section 2.5, Chapter 5.
  6. Tung 1985, Sections 10.3, 10.5.
  7. Tung 1985, Section 10.4.
  8. Dirac 1945
  9. 1 2 3 Harish-Chandra 1947
  10. Zwiebach 2004, Section 12.8.
  11. 1 2 Bekaert & Boulanger 2006, p. 48.
  12. Zwiebach 2004, Section 18.8.
  13. 1 2 Greiner & Reinhardt 1996, Chapter 2.
  14. Weinberg 2002, Foreword and introduction to chapter 7.
  15. Weinberg 2002, Introduction to chapter 7.
  16. Tung 1985, Definition 10.11.
  17. Greiner & Müller (1994, Chapter 1)
  18. Greiner & Müller (1994, Chapter 2)
  19. Tung 1985, p. 203.
  20. Delbourgo, Salam & Strathdee 1967
  21. Weinberg (2002, Section 3.3)
  22. Weinberg (2002, Section 7.4.)
  23. Tung 1985, Introduction to chapter 10.
  24. Tung 1985, Definition 10.12.
  25. Tung 1985, Equation 10.5-2.
  26. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.1.6-7.
  27. 1 2 Tung 1985, Equation 10.5-18.
  28. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.1.11-12.
  29. Tung 1985, Section 10.5.3.
  30. Zwiebach 2004, Section 6.4.
  31. Zwiebach 2004, Chapter 7.
  32. Zwiebach 2004, Section 12.5.
  33. 1 2 Weinberg 2000, Section 25.2.
  34. Zwiebach 2004, Last paragraph, section 12.6.
  35. These facts can be found in most introductory mathematics and physics texts. See e.g. Rossmann (2002), Hall (2015) and Tung (1985).
  36. Hall (2015, Theorem 4.34 and following discussion.)
  37. 1 2 3 Wigner 1939
  38. Hall 2015, Appendix D2.
  39. Greiner & Reinhardt 1996
  40. Weinberg 2002, Section 2.6 and Chapter 5.
  41. 1 2 Coleman 1989, p. 30.
  42. Lie 1888, 1890, 1893. Primary source.
  43. Coleman 1989, p. 34.
  44. Killing 1888 Primary source.
  45. 1 2 Rossmann 2002, Historical tidbits scattered across the text.
  46. Cartan 1913 Primary source.
  47. Green 1998, p=76.
  48. Brauer & Weyl 1935 Primary source.
  49. Tung 1985, Introduction.
  50. Weyl 1931 Primary source.
  51. Weyl 1939 Primary source.
  52. Langlands 1985, pp. 203205
  53. Harish-Chandra 1947 Primary source.
  54. Tung 1985, Introduction
  55. Wigner 1939 Primary source.
  56. Klauder 1999
  57. Bargmann 1947 Primary source.
  58. Bargmann was also a mathematician. He worked as Albert Einsteins assistant at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton (Klauder (1999)).
  59. Bargmann & Wigner 1948 Primary source.
  60. Dalitz & Peierls 1986
  61. Dirac 1928 Primary source.
  62. Hall 2003, Theorem 4.6.
  63. Hall 2003, Corollary 6.9.
  64. Hall 2003, Introduction to chapter 7.
  65. Hall 2015, Section 6.2. (There specialized to SU(3))
  66. Hall 2015, Section 7.2.
  67. Bäuerle, de Kerf & ten Kroode 1997, Chapter 20.
  68. Hall 2015, Sections 9.59.7
  69. Hall 2015, Chapter 12.
  70. 1 2 Rossmann 2002, Chapter 6.
  71. Hall 2003, 7.5
  72. This approach can, for e.g. be found in Example 4.10. of Hall, 2015 & Section 4.2.
  73. Kirillov 2008, Example 4.5.
  74. Rossmann 2002, Theorem 3, Section 6.5.
  75. 1 2 Knapp 2001, Section 2.3.
  76. Hall 2003, Section 7.5.1.
  77. Rossmann 2002 Theorem 1, Paragraph 2.5.
  78. Hall 2015, Theorem 5.6.
  79. Hall 2015, Proposition 5.9.
  80. Weinberg 2002, Appendix B.
  81. Hall 2015, Step 3 in proof of theorem 5.10.
  82. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.6.78.
  83. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.6.911.
  84. 1 2 3 Hall 2003, Chapter 6.
  85. 1 2 3 4 Knapp 2001
  86. This is an application of Rossmann 2002, Section 6.3, Proposition 10.
  87. 1 2 Knapp 2001, p. 32.
  88. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.6.16-17.
  89. Weinberg 2002, Section 5.6. The equations follow from equations 5.6.7-8 and 5.6.14-15.
  90. 1 2 Tung 1985
  91. Weinberg 2002 See footnote on p. 232.
  92. Lie 1888
  93. Rossmann 2002, Section 2.5.
  94. Hall 2015, Theorem 2.10.
  95. Bourbaki 1998, p. 424.
  96. Weinberg 2002, Section 2.7 p.88.
  97. 1 2 3 4 5 Weinberg 2002, Section 2.7.
  98. Hall 2015, Appendix C.3.
  99. Wigner 1939, p. 27.
  100. Gelfand, Minlos & Shapiro 1963 This construction of the covering group is treated in paragraph 4, section 1, chapter 1 in Part II.
  101. Rossmann 2002, Section 2.1.
  102. Hall 2015, First displayed equations in section 4.6.
  103. Hall 2015, Example 4.10.
  104. 1 2 Knapp 2001, Chapter 2.
  105. Knapp 2001 Equation 2.1.
  106. Hall 2015, Equation 4.2.
  107. Hall 2015, Equation before 4.5.
  108. Knapp 2001 Equation 2.4.
  109. Hall 2015, Theorems 9.45.
  110. Weinberg 2002, Chapter 5.
  111. Hall 2015, Theorem 10.18.
  112. Hall 2003, p. 235.
  113. See any text on basic group theory.
  114. Rossmann 2002 Propositions 3 and 6 paragraph 2.5.
  115. Hall 2003 See exercise 1, Chapter 6.
  116. Bekaert & Boulanger 2006 p.4.
  117. Hall 2003 Proposition 1.20.
  118. Lee 2003, Theorem 8.30.
  119. Weinberg 2002, Section 5.6, p. 231.
  120. Weinberg 2002, Section 5.6.
  121. Weinberg 2002, p. 231.
  122. Weinberg 2002, Sections 2.5, 5.7.
  123. Tung 1985, Section 10.5.
  124. Weinberg 2002 This is outlined (very briefly) on page 232, hardly more than a footnote.
  125. Hall 2003, Proposition 7.39.
  126. 1 2 Hall 2003, Theorem 7.40.
  127. Hall 2003, Section 6.6.
  128. Hall 2003, Second item in proposition 4.5.
  129. Hall 2003, p. 219.
  130. Rossmann 2002, Exercise 3 in paragraph 6.5.
  131. Hall 2003 See appendix D.3
  132. Weinberg 2002, Equation 5.4.8.
  133. 1 2 Weinberg 2002, Section 5.4.
  134. Weinberg 2002, pp. 215216.
  135. Weinberg 2002, Equation 5.4.6.
  136. Weinberg 2002 Section 5.4.
  137. Weinberg 2002, Section 5.7, pp. 232233.
  138. Weinberg 2002, Section 5.7, p. 233.
  139. Weinberg 2002 Equation 2.6.5.
  140. Weinberg 2002 Equation following 2.6.6.
  141. Weinberg 2002, Section 2.6.
  142. For a detailed discussion of the spin 0, 1/2 and 1 cases, see Greiner & Reinhardt 1996.
  143. Weinberg 2002, Chapter 3.
  144. Rossmann 2002 See section 6.1 for more examples, both finite-dimensional and infinite-dimensional.
  145. Gelfand, Minlos & Shapiro 1963
  146. Churchill & Brown 2014, Chapter 8 pp. 307-310.
  147. Gonzalez, P. A.; Vasquez, Y. (2014). "Dirac Quasinormal Modes of New Type Black Holes in New Massive Gravity". Eur. Phys. J. C. Berlin·Heidelberg: Springer. 74:2969: 3. ISSN 1434-6044. arXiv:1404.5371v2Freely accessible. doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-014-2969-1.
  148. Abramowitz & Stegun 1965, Equation 15.6.5.
  149. Simmons 1972, Sections 30, 31.
  150. Simmons 1972, Sections 30.
  151. Simmons 1972, Section 31.
  152. Simmons 1972, Equation 11 in appendix E, chapter 5.
  153. Langlands 1985, p. 205.
  154. Varadarajan 1989, Sections 3.1. 4.1.
  155. Langlands 1985, p. 203.
  156. Varadarajan 1989, Section 4.1.
  157. Gelfand, Graev & Pyatetskii-Shapiro 1969
  158. Knapp 2001, Chapter II.
  159. 1 2 Taylor 1986
  160. Knapp 2001 Chapter 2. Equation 2.12.
  161. Bargmann 1947
  162. Gelfand & Graev 1953
  163. Gelfand & Naimark 1947
  164. Takahashi 1963, p. 343.
  165. Knapp 2001, Equation 2.24.
  166. Folland 2015, Section 3.1.
  167. Folland 2015, Theorem 5.2.
  168. Tung 1985, Section 10.3.3.
  169. Harish-Chandra 1947, Footnote p. 374.
  170. Tung 1985, Equations 7.3-13, 7.3-14.
  171. Harish-Chandra 1947, Equation 8.
  172. Hall 2015, Proposition C.7.
  173. Hall 2015, Appendix C.2.
  174. Tung 1985, Step II section 10.2.
  175. Tung 1985, Equations 10.3-5. Tung's notation for ClebschGordan coefficients differ from the one used here.
  176. Tung 1985, Equation VII-3.
  177. Tung 1985, Equations 10.3-5, 7, 8.
  178. Tung 1985, Equation VII-9.
  179. Tung 1985, Equations VII-10, 11.
  180. Tung 1985, Equations VII-12.
  181. Tung 1985, Equations VII-13.
  182. Weinberg 2002, Equation 2.4.12.
  183. Weinberg 2002, Equations 2.4.18-2.4.20.
  184. Weinberg 2002, Equations 5.4.19, 5.4.20.

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References

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