Dual Representation and anti-particles

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the representation of anti-particles within the framework of group theory as it relates to quantum field theory (QFT), specifically focusing on the dual representation and its implications for SU(2) and SU(3). Participants explore the nature of representations and their equivalences, as well as the relationship between particles and antiparticles.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Ryan questions how anti-particles are represented if the dual representation is the same as the ordinary representation in SU(2).
  • Some participants suggest that SU(2) alone does not account for the charge of particles, indicating the need for a combined group like SU(2) x U(1) to fully describe electroweak interactions.
  • Carl points out that the quantum numbers of the dual representation are complementary to those of the regular representation, implying that they are not the same.
  • Daniel clarifies that the fundamental and contragradient representations of SU(2) are equivalent but not identical, emphasizing the importance of terminology.
  • George notes that while representations may be equivalent, the quantum numbers differ in sign, which is crucial for understanding the connection between particles and antiparticles.
  • Another participant elaborates on how a conjugate doublet of antiparticle fields can be represented in a way that transforms similarly to the particle doublet.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the nature of dual representations and their implications for anti-particles. There is no consensus on whether the dual representation can be considered the same as the ordinary representation, and the discussion remains unresolved regarding the precise relationship between these concepts.

Contextual Notes

Some participants highlight the importance of terminology and definitions in discussing representations, indicating that misunderstandings may arise from differing interpretations of terms like "real" and "dual." There are also references to specific mathematical structures, such as the Levi-Civita symbol, which may not be fully explored in the discussion.

Norman
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I am reading ahead for my Group Theory introduction to QFT and I have a question about the dual representation. If the dual representation is the same as the ordinary representation, that is to say the ordinary representation is "real", how do we represent anti-particles in this case? This seems to be the case for SU(2), which is the gauge group for weak interactions.
Thanks,
Ryan
 
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Anyone have any ideas? Maybe I posted this in the wrong forum... Or is my question completely non-sensical?
Cheers,
Ryan
 
Never mind. This is actually a pretty non-sensical question I think. (It is fun having an online conversation with myself) but in case someone else has this crazy question in the future, I will answer with what I think is the correct statement. SU(2) only talks about, say, weak isospin. But to take into account the charge of a particle we would need the group SU(2) X U(1). This group would account for electroweak theory and would allow the leptonic charge to change.
Cheers,
Ryan
 
Norman said:
I am reading ahead for my Group Theory introduction to QFT and I have a question about the dual representation. If the dual representation is the same as the ordinary representation, that is to say the ordinary representation is "real", how do we represent anti-particles in this case? This seems to be the case for SU(2), which is the gauge group for weak interactions.
Thanks,
Ryan

I'm not sure what you mean by requiring the ordinary representation to be "real". With that caveat, here's a stab:

If you take a look at [tex]\mathcal{SU}(3)[/tex] and its triplet and dual triplet irreps, you will find that the quantum numbers of the dual are complementary to the quantum numbers of the regular representation. So I'm not really sure what you mean when you say that they are the same. Sure you can rotate one to the other, but the antiparticles carry negated quantum numbers.

Carl
 
CarlB said:
I'm not sure what you mean by requiring the ordinary representation to be "real". With that caveat, here's a stab:

If you take a look at [tex]\mathcal{SU}(3)[/tex] and its triplet and dual triplet irreps, you will find that the quantum numbers of the dual are complementary to the quantum numbers of the regular representation. So I'm not really sure what you mean when you say that they are the same. Sure you can rotate one to the other, but the antiparticles carry negated quantum numbers.

Carl
SU(3) has a dual, but the dual to SU(2) is equal to the ordinary rep.
 
Norman said:
SU(3) has a dual, but the dual to SU(2) is equal to the ordinary rep.

I see your question now. So your answer to your own question is that if one wants an antiparticle associated with a particle collection that follows an SU(2) symmetry, then one must use a different symmetry to generate the relationship between the particles and antiparticles?

Carl
 
By "dual" u mean "contragradient", i see, now. The fundamental and the contragradient representations of [itex]\mbox{SU(2)}[/itex] are not the same, but equivalent. This means there is a similarity transformation connecting the generators of the two representations. But you can't say "they're the same". Think of the Dirac algebra

[tex]\left[\gamma_{\mu},\gamma_{\nu}]_{+} =2g_{\mu\nu}\hat{1}_{V}[/tex]

U can't say the Dirac representation is "the same" with the Weyl and the Majorana one.

Daniel.

P.S.Terminology is important.:wink:
 
CarlB said:
I see your question now. So your answer to your own question is that if one wants an antiparticle associated with a particle collection that follows an SU(2) symmetry, then one must use a different symmetry to generate the relationship between the particles and antiparticles?
Carl

Yes. I believe that is the answer to the question. Someone can correct me if I am wrong.
 
dextercioby said:
By "dual" u mean "contragradient", i see, now. The fundamental and the contragradient representations of [itex]\mbox{SU(2)}[/itex] are not the same, but equivalent. This means there is a similarity transformation connecting the generators of the two representations. But you can't say "they're the same". Think of the Dirac algebra

[tex]\left[\gamma_{\mu},\gamma_{\nu}]_{+} =2g_{\mu\nu}\hat{1}_{V}[/tex]

U can't say the Dirac representation is "the same" with the Weyl and the Majorana one.

Daniel.

P.S.Terminology is important.:wink:

Of course. Terminology is always very important. But the lecture notes we were given stated things using the terms I used in my original post. Unfortunately I have to go with what is in there mainly. Oh well, a process is learning.
Cheers,
Ryan
 
  • #10
Even though the representations are equivalent, the weights, i.e., quantum numbers, for the representations have different signs, and hence the connection between particles and antiparticles.

Regards,
George
 
  • #11
George Jones said:
Even though the representations are equivalent, the weights, i.e., quantum numbers, for the representations have different signs, and hence the connection between particles and antiparticles.

Regards,
George

Yes but the weights for SU(2) are just opposite in sign, so changeing their sign maps the positive one onto the negative one and vice versa. This doesn't give you 2 new particles, this brings one particle to another in the same representation. That is just the way I understand it though. I believe this is exactly why a complete theory of weak interactions must incorporate electromagnetic interactions thus giving us a SU(2) X U(1) gauge group. (this may not be WHY EM must be incorporated into Weak interactions, but it is part of the reason I think.)
 
  • #12
Norman I am reading ahead for my Group Theory introduction to QFT and I have a question about the dual representation. If the dual representation is the same as the ordinary representation said:
take a fundamental doublet of fields, u and d, write them as a column su(2)-vector (the {2}). The conjugate doublet of antiparticle fields transforms as a row vector;(u*,d*). Now with aid of the totally antisymmetric tensor (the Levi-Civita SYMBOL) which is invariant under su(2) transformations, we may write the above as a column vector also, with (-d*) as 1st element and (u*) the 2nd.i.e the antiparticle doublet(-d*,u*) transforms exactly as the particle doublet(u,d),and belongs to the same {2}.


regards

sam
 

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