Sivasakthi
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I have a doubt regarding the antisymmetry in the wave function of fermions.The antisymmetry is in the complete wave function or it is in the spin?
No, the exchange is a complete particle exchange - space, spin and all internal variables such as isospin, color...Sivasakthi said:Can we say that the antisymmetry in the total wave function is because of the antisymmetry in spin?The exchange of particles just deals with their spatial symmetry...so finally ends with Pauli's principle...am i correct?
Sivasakthi said:So does it mean that there exists many other possibilities than spin through which we may distinguish the identical particles?
This exactly what the above mentioned construction does:Sivasakthi said:does it have any sense if we are asked to create a symmetric state for them?
Buttom.stoer said:... creating two particles in the same state [= creating a symmetric state] simply means
##|a,a\rangle = \left(b_a^\dagger\right)^2|0\rangle##
for fermionic operators we have
##\left(b_a^\dagger\right)^2 = 0##
and therefore the [symmetric] state ##|a,a\rangle## is the null-vector.
CompuChip said:... the scalar 0 means that the operation is unphysical [i.e. that no such state does exist]
CompuChip said:You should also be careful in distinguishing the following:
* |0> is the "vacuum" state in which you can create particles. It is a non-trivial state |n> with n=0 the label of the state.
* The null vector 0 (the analog of the origin in ##\mathbb R^n##) holds no information whatsoever and means that the operation is unphysical.