PineApple2 said:
Hi. In Georgi's book page 143, eqn. (10.29) he gives an example of decomposing a tensor product into irreps:
<br />
u^iv_k^j=\frac{1}{2} \left( u^iv_k^j+u^jv_k^i-\frac{1}{4}\delta_k^iu^\ell v_\ell^j-\frac{1}{4}\delta_k^ju^\ell v_\ell^i \right)\\<br />
+\frac{1}{4} \varepsilon^{ij\ell} \left( \varepsilon_{\ell m n}u^m v_k^n + \varepsilon_{kmn}u^m v_\ell ^n \right)\\<br />
+\frac{1}{8} \left( 3 \delta_k^i u^\ell v_\ell^j - \delta_k^j u^\ell v_\ell^i \right)<br />
I have a few novice questions about this.
1. In the first line, he symmetrizes and removes the trace. Looking at the second line, it can be written as \frac{1}{2} (u^i v_k^j-u^jv_k^i) - \frac{1}{4} \delta_k^i u^\ell v_\ell ^j + \frac{1}{4} \delta_k^j u^\ell v_\ell ^i which corresponds to also removing the trace from the anti-symmetric part. Why do we need to also remove the trace from the anti-symmetric part? aren't the irreducible representations - traceless symmetric, anti-symmetric, and trace?
2. Why is the trace v_j^j zero?
3. How do we get the dimensions of the irreps. For example, how do we figure out that the first line corresponds to \mathbf{\bar{15}}?
Thanks.
If all the components of a tensor T are independent of each other, we say that the tensor is irreducible, i.e., if such tensor has d components then we have a d-vector in (an irreducible) d-dimensional vector space. We write this irreducible representation space as [d]. This means that the group in question acts on (transforms) such vector by d \times d matrix representation of the group elements. However, in general an arbitrary tensor is reducible, i.e., not all components are independent of each other. Reducible tensor can be decomposed (in a group invariant way) into irreducible tensors by the processes of symmetrization, antisymmetrization and contraction between upper and lower indices, i.e., subtracting all possible traces.
Okay, let us talk about SU(3). Consider the antisymmetric tensor T^{[ij]}_{k} = T^{ij}_{k} - T^{ji}_{k}. It has 3(\frac{1}{2}(2)(3)) = 9 components but it is not irreducible. To reduce it, we impose the 3 trace relations T^{[ij]}_{j}=0. So, we end up with 9-3=6 independent components. But 6 is exactly the number of independent components in a symmetric tensor S_{(kl)}. This means that traceless antisymmetric mixed tensor \hat{T}^{[ij]}_{k} is equivalent to a symmetric rank-2 tensor. This is exactly what you have done in the second line of your equation. In practise, we actually never need to subtract a trace from the antisymmetric part because by subtracting the trace from the symmetric part we also have to balance our equation, i.e., we have to add what we have subtracted and this added piece will make the antisymmetric part traceless (see below).
Now, let us count the number of independent components in the traceless symmetric tensor T^{(ij)}_{k} (this is the same tensor in the first line of your equation). Again, symmetry implies that for each k, we have \frac{1}{2}(3)(4) = 6 components, i.e., a total of 3 \times 6 = 18 components in the symmetric mixed tensor. Then, the 3 trace relations T^{(ij)}_{i}=0 reduces the number to 18-3=15 independent components. If you associate upper indices with the conjugate representation, then T^{(ij)}_{k} \equiv \frac{1}{2} u^{(i}v^{j)}_{k} - \frac{1}{8} \delta^{(i}_{k}v^{j)}_{n}u^{n} \in [\bar{15}] .
Now, the number of components of the totally symmetric (irreducible) SU(3) tensor T^{(k_{1} k_{2} \cdots k_{m})} is \frac{1}{2}(m+1)(m+2). Therefore, the tensor T^{(k_{1} k_{2} \cdot k_{m})}_{(j_{1} j_{2} \cdots j_{n})} has \frac{1}{4}(m+1)(m+2)(n+1)(n+2) components. The number of components of the corresponding (traceless) irreducible tensor \hat{T}^{(\cdots)}_{(\cdots)} will be less than that of T^{(\cdots)}_{(\cdots)} by the number of independent components in the reduced-rank tensor T^{(k_{1} \cdots k_{m-1})}_{(j_{1} \cdots j_{n-1})}, i.e., the dimension of the space of traces:
\mbox{dim}\left( \hat{T}^{(k_{1} \cdots k_{m})}_{(j_{1} \cdots j_{n})} \right) = \mbox{dim}\left( T^{(k_{1} \cdots k_{m})}_{(j_{1} \cdots j_{n})} \right) - \mbox{dim}\left( T^{(k_{1} \cdots k_{m-1})}_{(j_{1} \cdots j_{n-1})} \right) , or
\mbox{dim}(m,n) = \frac{1}{4}(m+1)(m+2)(n+1)(n+2) - \frac{1}{4}m(m+1)n(n+1) = \frac{1}{2}(m+1)(n+1)(m+n+2) .
As for why v^{i}_{j} is traceless: well it is (1,1) irreducible tensor. So, by the above relation of the dimension you see that v^{i}_{j} belongs to the adjoint representation [8] which is traceless by construction. Do you recall the relation [3] \otimes [\bar{3}] = [8] \oplus [1]? In tensor language, we take the tensor product of the fundamental representation \phi^{i} with its conjugate representation \phi_{j} and subtract the invariant trace: \phi^{i} \otimes \phi_{j} = \left( \phi^{i} \ \phi_{j} - \frac{1}{3} \ \delta^{i}_{j} \ \phi^{n}\phi_{n}\right) + \frac{1}{3} \ \delta^{i}_{j} \ \phi^{n}\phi_{n} . So, your v^{i}_{j} is just v^{i}_{j} = \phi^{i} \ \phi_{j} - \frac{1}{3} \ \delta^{i}_{j} \ \phi^{n}\phi_{n} , which is traceless and has 8 independent components, i.e., it belongs to the adjoint representation [8].
Finally, let me do what I should have done first. Notice first that u^{i}v^{j}_{k} \in [3] \otimes [8], i.e. it is a reducible tensor. So, let us decompose it into irreducible parts. First, we split the tensor into symmetric and antisymmetric tensors:
u^{i}v^{j}_{k} = \frac{1}{2} u^{(i}v^{j)}_{k} + \frac{1}{2} u^{[i}v^{j]}_{k} . To make the symmetric part traceless, we subtract (and add) the symmetric combinations of traces
u^{i}v^{j}_{k} = T^{(ij)}_{k} + \frac{1}{2} u^{[i}v^{j]}_{k} + \frac{1}{8}\delta^{(i}_{k}v^{j)}_{n}u^{n} , \ \ (1) where T is the traceless symmetric tensor
T^{(ij)}_{k} = \frac{1}{2} u^{(i}v^{j)}_{k} - \frac{1}{8}\delta^{(i}_{k}v^{j)}_{n}u^{n} \in [15]. \ \ \ \ (2)
Now, in Eq(1) we use the identity (which you can verify easily)
\delta^{(i}_{k}v^{j)}_{n} = -2 \delta^{[i}_{k}v^{j]}_{n} + 3 \delta^{i}_{k}v^{j}_{n} - \delta^{j}_{k}v^{i}_{n} , and arrange the terms:
u^{i}v^{j}_{k} = T^{(ij)}_{k} + T^{[ij]}_{k} + \frac{3}{8}\delta^{i}_{k}v^{j}_{n}u^{n} - \frac{1}{8}\delta^{j}_{k}v^{i}_{n}u^{n} , where we have defined the following traceless antisymmetric tensor
T^{[ij]}_{k} = \frac{1}{2} u^{[i}v^{j]}_{k} - \frac{1}{4}\delta^{[i}_{k}v^{j]}_{n}u^{n} . This can be rewritten as
T^{[ij]}_{k} = \frac{1}{4} \epsilon^{ijl}S_{(kl)} \in [\bar{6}] , \ \ \ (3)
where
S_{(kl)} = \epsilon_{kmn}u^{m}v^{n}_{l} + \epsilon_{lmn}u^{m}v^{n}_{k} . \ \ \ (4) Now, if you put (2), (3), and (4) in (1), you obtain the equation you wrote.
After all that, we finally proved
3 \times 8 = 15 + \bar{6} + 3 .
Sam