teddd
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Hi guys!
I still have problem clearing once and for all my doubt on the spinor representation. Sorry, but i just cannot catch it.
1)
-----
Take a left handed spinor, \chi_L.
Now, i know it transforms according to the Lorentz group, but why do i have to take the \Lambda_L matrices belonging to SL(2,\mathbb C),
\chi'=\Lambda_L\chi??
Dimensionally it makes sense, it's like
\left(\begin{align}\chi'_{L1}\\ \chi'_{L2}\end{align}\right)=\left(\begin{align}A &B\\C&D\end{align} \right) \left(\begin{align} \chi_{L1}\\ \chi_{L2} \end{align}\right)
but why exacly SL(2,\mathbb C) matrices and not every other generic 2x2 complex matrix?-----
2)
----
Is it right to say that \Lambda_L is the representation of the lorentz group which acts on spinors?
I have this doubt becaouse i read everywhere that the spinor is a \left(0,\frac{1}{2}\right) representation of the lorentz group, but i'd say that the spinor os the thing on which the \Lambda_L acts, and it is the \Lambda_L itself to be a represetation of the group!
I still have problem clearing once and for all my doubt on the spinor representation. Sorry, but i just cannot catch it.
1)
-----
Take a left handed spinor, \chi_L.
Now, i know it transforms according to the Lorentz group, but why do i have to take the \Lambda_L matrices belonging to SL(2,\mathbb C),
\chi'=\Lambda_L\chi??
Dimensionally it makes sense, it's like
\left(\begin{align}\chi'_{L1}\\ \chi'_{L2}\end{align}\right)=\left(\begin{align}A &B\\C&D\end{align} \right) \left(\begin{align} \chi_{L1}\\ \chi_{L2} \end{align}\right)
but why exacly SL(2,\mathbb C) matrices and not every other generic 2x2 complex matrix?-----
2)
----
Is it right to say that \Lambda_L is the representation of the lorentz group which acts on spinors?
I have this doubt becaouse i read everywhere that the spinor is a \left(0,\frac{1}{2}\right) representation of the lorentz group, but i'd say that the spinor os the thing on which the \Lambda_L acts, and it is the \Lambda_L itself to be a represetation of the group!
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