Helicity and Weyl spinors

In summary: I'm not sure handedness is exclusive to helicity. I think I've read handedness refer to chirality before too. It could be that people are just confusing the terms helicity and chirality. You have left and right helicity, and left and right chirality, so sometimes maybe people just call them both handedness. I agree the nomenclature is horrible and misleading.Yes, I agree, that's why I wanted to get this sorted out.The reason I excluded chirality is because for experimentalists there's no such thing. They prepare an initial free state and a final free state, and since
  • #1
nrqed
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Weyl spinors are not eigenstates of the helicity operator when the mass is not zero.
But they have well-defined chiralities no matter what the mass is.

Yet, it seems to me that references keep talking of Weyl spinors as if they have well-defined helicities, regardless of the mass.


First, people keep talking of the Weyl spinors as left-handed and right-handed, even when there is a mass present. I guess that they are really talking about the chirality here, even though they use the language of handedness. Am I correct?


Second, consider CPT. I have read that the CPT conjugate of a left-handed spinor is the right-handed antiparticle state. It seems to me here again that we are trully talking about chirality, not helicity. And yet I have read some authors saying that CPT conjugates have opposite helicities.



Third, consider Lorentz boosts. Now it definitely seem that under a Lorentz boost, we may change a positive helicity state into a negative helicity state. But that does not imply that we are transforming a left-handed Weyl spinor into a right-handed Weyl spinor, since these do not have well-defined helicities. And yet, that seems to be what is implied by some authors.



Anyoen can shed some light on these points?

Thanks!

Patrick
 
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  • #2
I'm not sure if this helps, but if the fermion has mass, then there is really no such thing as a left or right chiral field. The free Dirac equation says you have to have both when your particle has mass. So one speaks about fermions with helicities and not chiralities since the free Dirac equation allows the existence of fermions with left and right helicities. For something that's fast moving like neutrinos, helicity is almost equal to chirality, so you can mix up the two terms and it doesn't really change the outcome of the discussion.

As for CPT, I think helicity does change. Spin transforms like angular momentum, rxp, so under CPT this changes sign as p remains the same and r changes sign. Helicity is spin dotted with momentum, and since momentum doesn't change, helicity overall changes sign.

As for Lorentz boosts, just take the case of fast moving particles. So say you have a right-helicity particle and you boost so that it becomes a left-helicity one. Well, since the particle is fast, chirality is almost equal to helicity, so you've also almost changed a right-chiral particle to a left-chiral one.
 
  • #3
RedX said:
I'm not sure if this helps, but if the fermion has mass, then there is really no such thing as a left or right chiral field.
Well, the two component spinors are still eigenstates of the chirality operator. So they do have a well-defined chirality. They don't have a well-defined helicity. But, and this was the object of my question, many references still call the two-component spinors "left-handed and right-handed Weyl spinors" even when the mass is not zero (and use subscripts L and R on the two-component spinors). Other references say that we only have Weyl spinors when the mass is zero. So it's quite confusing. It seems that not everyone is using the same notation.

The free Dirac equation says you have to have both when your particle has mass. So one speaks about fermions with helicities and not chiralities since the free Dirac equation allows the existence of fermions with left and right helicities.

I am not sure why you exclude chirality. Chirality is a good quantum number whether or not the mass is zero.

For something that's fast moving like neutrinos, helicity is almost equal to chirality, so you can mix up the two terms and it doesn't really change the outcome of the discussion.
Yes, but for something massive, we can always move to a frame where it is moving very slowly or at rest, so the question still remains.

As for CPT, I think helicity does change. Spin transforms like angular momentum, rxp, so under CPT this changes sign as p remains the same and r changes sign. Helicity is spin dotted with momentum, and since momentum doesn't change, helicity overall changes sign.

Good point. What confuses me is that a massive particle state does not have a well-defined helicity. So under CPT, we should not say that the helicity of the *state* changes sign.

As for Lorentz boosts, just take the case of fast moving particles. So say you have a right-helicity particle and you boost so that it becomes a left-helicity one. Well, since the particle is fast, chirality is almost equal to helicity, so you've also almost changed a right-chiral particle to a left-chiral one.
Yes, but I want to be general.

Thansk for your input
 
  • #4
The term Weyl spinor has different meanings. Some call only massless particles Weyl spinors. Others call Weyl spinors the (1/2,0) and (0,1/2) representations that make up SO(4).

I'm not sure handedness is exclusive to helicity. I think I've read handedness refer to chirality before too. It could be that people are just confusing the terms helicity and chirality. You have left and right helicity, and left and right chirality, so sometimes maybe people just call them both handedness. I agree the nomenclature is horrible and misleading.

The reason I excluded chirality is because for experimentalists there's no such thing. They prepare an initial free state and a final free state, and since the states are free, it's not a state of definite chirality, but they can prepare states of definite helicity.

Also a massive particle state can have well-defined helicity.

As for my last statement on Lorentz boosts, that was a mistake. If something is moving really fast in one direction, close to the speed of light, then you cannot overtake it and still have it approaching the speed of light. I knew something was fishy about my last statement since you can't change chirality by Lorentz boosts.
 
  • #5
RedX said:
The term Weyl spinor has different meanings. Some call only massless particles Weyl spinors. Others call Weyl spinors the (1/2,0) and (0,1/2) representations that make up SO(4).

Exactly. So there are two conventions for what is meant by ``Weyl spinor". This has caused me some confusion in going back and forth between different references and reading statements that seemed to be contradictory.


I'm not sure handedness is exclusive to helicity. I think I've read handedness refer to chirality before too. It could be that people are just confusing the terms helicity and chirality. You have left and right helicity, and left and right chirality, so sometimes maybe people just call them both handedness. I agree the nomenclature is horrible and misleading.


That's right. Some use "left-handed" and "right-handed" for the eigenvalues of chirality and others for the eigenvalues of helicity or, often, for both. Unfortunately, when it is used for both, then any statement made is ambigous.

The reason I excluded chirality is because for experimentalists there's no such thing. They prepare an initial free state and a final free state, and since the states are free, it's not a state of definite chirality, but they can prepare states of definite helicity.
Ok, I see your proint ,but I am interested in issues of principle, not of practicality.


Also a massive particle state can have well-defined helicity.
Yes, I agree, but that's only in a specific frame. What I meant is that we cannot assign a definite helicity to a massive particle in a Lorentz invariant way. For a massive paricle, helicity is like the z component of spin, its value is observer dependent.


My questions are these:

a) One often reads that the charge conjugated state of a left-handed particle is a rigt-handed antiparticle. If I understand correctly, here ``left-handed" and "right-handed" refers to chirality. So CPT changes the chirality.
It changes also the helicity but again, for a massive particle, this is not an invariant property so it is not really relevant

b) A Lorentz boost changes helicity but, as far as I can tell, it does not change the chirality. Now the fact that the notation is so confusing becomes extremely tricky. Because if we use left-handed and right-handed to denote chirality, then we would have to say that a Lorentz boost changes the helicity even though a left-handed particle remains a left-anded particle (i.e. [itex] \psi_L [/itex] remains [itex] \psi_L [/itex]). Am I getting this right?
 
  • #6
Let me ask a slightly different questions:

1) Do CPT conjugates have opposite chiralities?


2) Does a Lorentz boost change the chirality?


It seems to me that the answers are respectively yes and no, but I must be mistaken.
If we consider a Majorana particle and take its CPT conjugate, we should get back something equivalent to the state we started from, since a Majorana particle is its own antiparticle. If taking the CPT changes the chirality but a Lorentz boost doesn't, then we can never recover the initial state and the particle is distinct from its antiparticle.

Therefore, a Lorentz boost must change the chirality!? This seems wrong since chiral eigenstates are irreducible representations of the Lorentz group...

Anybody can shed some light on this issue?

Thanks
 
Last edited:
  • #7
nrqed said:
1) Do CPT conjugates have opposite chiralities?

2) Does a Lorentz boost change the chirality?

For a Dirac particle one usually writes the P,C,T
operators explicitly as
[tex]
P = e^{i\phi}\gamma_0
[/tex]
[tex]
C = i \gamma_2 \gamma_0
[/tex]
[tex]
T = \gamma_1 \gamma_3 K
[/tex]

where K is the operator of complex conjugation.
(I.e., [itex]K i = - i K[/itex] and [itex]K \gamma_2 = - \gamma_2 K[/itex])

The chirality operator is
[tex]
\gamma_5 = i \gamma_0 \gamma_1 \gamma_2 \gamma_3
[/tex]

The Lorentz transf operators are
[tex]
\gamma_{\mu\nu} ~:=~ i/4 [\gamma_\mu , \gamma_\nu]
[/tex]

So [itex]P \gamma_5 = - \gamma_5 P[/itex] , showing that a
parity inversion also inverts chirality.

Also [itex]\gamma_{\mu\nu} \gamma_5 = \gamma_5 \gamma_{\mu\nu}[/itex] , showing that a
Lorentz transformation leaves chirality unchanged.

Similarly, it looks to me that C and T both commute with [itex]\gamma_5[/itex]
but you'd better double-check that. :-) This would mean that CPT changes the sign
of the chirality. But this is error-prone since you've got to make sure all factors of i
are correct everywhere, since the K operator is involved. Cf. Peskin & Schroeder p71
where they summarize the action of the various discrete operators on Dirac
bilinears: their pseudoscalar is written as [itex]i\bar{\psi}\gamma_5\psi[/itex]
and CPT leaves it unchanged (see their table).

BTW, in the thing about "handedness" for helicity and chirality... helicity
handedness is visualized by pointing your thumb in some direction and wrapping
your fingers around it to indicate spin. However, chirality handedness is
visualized by holding your thumb, 1st finger and 2nd finger mutually at right
angles. Doing this with both your left and right hands shows that no amount
of rotation or boosting can make the right hand look like the left.

HTH.
 
  • #8
strangerep said:
For a Dirac particle one usually writes the P,C,T
operators explicitly as
[tex]
P = e^{i\phi}\gamma_0
[/tex]
[tex]
C = i \gamma_2 \gamma_0
[/tex]
[tex]
T = \gamma_1 \gamma_3 K
[/tex]

where K is the operator of complex conjugation.
(I.e., [itex]K i = - i K[/itex] and [itex]K \gamma_2 = - \gamma_2 K[/itex])

The chirality operator is
[tex]
\gamma_5 = i \gamma_0 \gamma_1 \gamma_2 \gamma_3
[/tex]

The Lorentz transf operators are
[tex]
\gamma_{\mu\nu} ~:=~ i/4 [\gamma_\mu , \gamma_\nu]
[/tex]

So [itex]P \gamma_5 = - \gamma_5 P[/itex] , showing that a
parity inversion also inverts chirality.

Also [itex]\gamma_{\mu\nu} \gamma_5 = \gamma_5 \gamma_{\mu\nu}[/itex] , showing that a
Lorentz transformation leaves chirality unchanged.

Similarly, it looks to me that C and T both commute with [itex]\gamma_5[/itex]
but you'd better double-check that. :-) This would mean that CPT changes the sign
of the chirality. But this is error-prone since you've got to make sure all factors of i
are correct everywhere, since the K operator is involved. Cf. Peskin & Schroeder p71
where they summarize the action of the various discrete operators on Dirac
bilinears: their pseudoscalar is written as [itex]i\bar{\psi}\gamma_5\psi[/itex]
and CPT leaves it unchanged (see their table).

BTW, in the thing about "handedness" for helicity and chirality... helicity
handedness is visualized by pointing your thumb in some direction and wrapping
your fingers around it to indicate spin. However, chirality handedness is
visualized by holding your thumb, 1st finger and 2nd finger mutually at right
angles. Doing this with both your left and right hands shows that no amount
of rotation or boosting can make the right hand look like the left.

HTH.

Thank you! Yes, that helps. Very informative. But it brings another question. Consider a massive Majorana spinor.

We say that a Majorana spinor is its own antiparticle.
Let's say I start with a right-chiral, right-handed state. Under CPT, we then get a left-chiral, left-handed antiparticle state. But this must somehow be equivalent to the state we started with. A Lorentz boost flips the helicity but it does not change the chirality, so how can we say that a Majorana particle is its own antiparticle?


Thanks!
 
  • #9
nrqed said:
We say that a Majorana spinor is its own antiparticle.
Let's say I start with a right-chiral, right-handed state. Under CPT, we then get a left-chiral, left-handed antiparticle state. But this must somehow be equivalent to the state we started with.

I guess it depends on one's definition of "antiparticle". One definition is that both "particle"
and "antiparticle" transform according to the same Poincare irrep, but belong to
different inequivalent representations (which can arise when complex conjugation
is in play). E.g., for a 2-complex-dimensional Lorentz rep there are in fact two
inequivalent reps, obtainable from each other by complex conjugation. These reps are
"inequivalent" because you can't use a (constant) matrix similarity transformation to
achieve complex conjugation.

However, a Majorana spinor belongs by definition to a real representation (not a
complex rep as the more familiar spinors do). Hence complex conjugation has
no effect -- it doesn't give you an inequivalent rep in this case.

Wiki has a bit more info...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majorana_equation

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiparticle

A Lorentz boost flips the helicity but it does not change the chirality, so how
can we say that a Majorana particle is its own antiparticle?
It's got nothing to with whether a Lorentz boost changes helicity.
What matters is the particular representation the particle transforms
according to. The set of distinguishable reps determines the set
of particle "types".
 

What is helicity?

Helicity is a quantum mechanical property that describes the spin orientation of a particle along its direction of motion. It can have a positive or negative value, corresponding to a particle spinning in the same or opposite direction as its motion, respectively.

How is helicity related to Weyl spinors?

Weyl spinors are mathematical objects that represent the spin states of particles with half-integer spin, such as electrons. The helicity of a particle can be described in terms of the chirality of its corresponding Weyl spinor, with left-handed Weyl spinors having negative helicity and right-handed Weyl spinors having positive helicity.

What is the significance of helicity and Weyl spinors in particle physics?

Helicity and Weyl spinors play a crucial role in the Standard Model of particle physics, which describes the fundamental particles and forces in the universe. They are used to classify and describe the properties of particles, and their interactions are governed by the laws of quantum mechanics.

Can helicity be changed or manipulated?

In general, helicity is a conserved quantity and cannot be changed or manipulated. However, in certain cases such as high-energy collisions, it is possible for particles to change their helicity through interactions with other particles.

Are there any practical applications of helicity and Weyl spinors?

While the concepts of helicity and Weyl spinors are primarily used in theoretical physics, they also have practical applications in fields such as particle physics research and medical imaging technology. Understanding and manipulating these properties can provide insights into the fundamental nature of matter and energy.

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