RedX said:
That's a good question that I think I need clarification on too.
If you have multiple particles in quantum mechanics, then this is represented by a direct product, and not a direct sum. However, when you rotate your state, you rotate all particles through the same angle: you do not have a separate angle for each particle. However, the (1/2, 1/2) direct product is the opposite. Here, you rotate through two different independent angles!
A direct sum is always rotated through the same angle. A direct product? It seems sometimes you rotate through the same angle, and sometimes you don't! Anyone know why?
I don't think I have much insight into the geometry of these reps, so I can't address what
you're asking...I am testing my understanding of the 4 dim reps of the group by trying
different combinations :
(1/2,0) + (1/2,0) (not faithful)
(1/2,0) x (1/2,0) = (1,0) + (0,0) (not faithful)
(0,1/2) + (0,1/2) (not faithful)
(0,1/2) x (0,1/2) = (0,1) + (0,0) (not faithful)
(1/2,0) + (0,1/2) (faithful)
(1/2,0) x (0,1/2) = (1/2,1/2) (faithful)
(here + is direct sum and x is tensor product). So it seems there are 2
inequivalent faithful reps of dim=4: (1/2,0)+(0,1/2) and (1/2,1/2) the last
one being equvalent to (1/2,0)x(0,1/2)