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The Lagrangian \mathcal L =\psi^{\dagger}\gamma^0 \gamma^\mu (1-\gamma^5)\partial_\mu \psi should violate parity, but I'm getting that it doesn't.
\psi(x) changes to \gamma^0 \psi( Px) where Px=(t,-x) and x=(t,x).
\gamma^j goes to - \gamma^j, while \gamma^0 stays the same. \gamma^5 goes to -\gamma^5.
\partial_j goes to -\partial_j while \partial_0 stays the same.
So P^{-1}\mathcal L P=(\psi^{\dagger}(Px)\gamma^0)\gamma^0 \gamma^\mu (1+\gamma^5)\partial_\mu (\gamma^0 \psi(Px)) (the contraction between \gamma^\mu and \partial_\mu stays the same under parity).
So: P^{-1}\mathcal L P=(\psi^{\dagger}(Px) \gamma^0 \gamma^\mu (1-\gamma^5)\partial_{P\mu} \psi(Px). Here \partial_{P\mu}=\frac{\partial}{\partial (Px)^\mu}
Therefore doesn't P^{-1}\mathcal L(x) P= \mathcal L(Px)? Which means the Lagrangian doesn't change under parity?
\psi(x) changes to \gamma^0 \psi( Px) where Px=(t,-x) and x=(t,x).
\gamma^j goes to - \gamma^j, while \gamma^0 stays the same. \gamma^5 goes to -\gamma^5.
\partial_j goes to -\partial_j while \partial_0 stays the same.
So P^{-1}\mathcal L P=(\psi^{\dagger}(Px)\gamma^0)\gamma^0 \gamma^\mu (1+\gamma^5)\partial_\mu (\gamma^0 \psi(Px)) (the contraction between \gamma^\mu and \partial_\mu stays the same under parity).
So: P^{-1}\mathcal L P=(\psi^{\dagger}(Px) \gamma^0 \gamma^\mu (1-\gamma^5)\partial_{P\mu} \psi(Px). Here \partial_{P\mu}=\frac{\partial}{\partial (Px)^\mu}
Therefore doesn't P^{-1}\mathcal L(x) P= \mathcal L(Px)? Which means the Lagrangian doesn't change under parity?