Living_Dog
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I have been struggling with this for a long time. I gave up to review GR and came back to Ryder. I started in Chapter 2 and the material was easier and more intuitive on this second pass. But the same topic, "SU(2) and the rotation group" has trapped me yet again. I am bogged down specifically on pages 34 - 36. So here are my questions:
1) From pg. 35: Under SU(2) \xi does not transform like \xi^{+}, but \[ \left( \begin{array}{c} \xi_1 \\ \xi_2 \end{array} \right)\] and \[ \left( \begin{array}{c} -\xi^*_2 \\ \xi^*_1 \end{array} \right)\] do.
I tried all four possibilities: \xi' \equiv U\xi, \xi^{+}' \equiv \xi^{+}U^{+}, ... and the other two with the second spinor. None of them look the same, and they all transform "the same way"!
2) From pg. 36:
\xi \xi^{+} \equiv \[ \left( \begin{array}{c} \xi_1 \\ \xi_2 \end{array} \right)\] \[ \left( \begin{array}{cc} -\xi_2 & \xi_1 \end{array} \right)\] \equiv -H.
If one thing is clear from my post it is that I have no clue what Ryder is talking about on these two short pages.
Thanks in advance to anyone for anything anywhere at any time!
(PS: I can't get that column vector times a row vector to equal the 'H' matrix to display properly. Sorry.)
1) From pg. 35: Under SU(2) \xi does not transform like \xi^{+}, but \[ \left( \begin{array}{c} \xi_1 \\ \xi_2 \end{array} \right)\] and \[ \left( \begin{array}{c} -\xi^*_2 \\ \xi^*_1 \end{array} \right)\] do.
- where does he get that (is it magic)??
- I can choose another spinor and it also transforms "the same way"
- ...what does he mean by "the same way"?
I tried all four possibilities: \xi' \equiv U\xi, \xi^{+}' \equiv \xi^{+}U^{+}, ... and the other two with the second spinor. None of them look the same, and they all transform "the same way"!
2) From pg. 36:
\xi \xi^{+} \equiv \[ \left( \begin{array}{c} \xi_1 \\ \xi_2 \end{array} \right)\] \[ \left( \begin{array}{cc} -\xi_2 & \xi_1 \end{array} \right)\] \equiv -H.
- if \xi \equiv (\xi_1 \xi_2) then \xi^{+} is not what he uses here - he uses that mysterious other spinor that is NOT \xi^{+}!
- what's the point of calling this thing 'H'??
- why does he construct 'h' - as if from nowhere then he says 'h' is 'H'!
- since 'h' is a 2x2 matrix, how can it act on r??
If one thing is clear from my post it is that I have no clue what Ryder is talking about on these two short pages.
Thanks in advance to anyone for anything anywhere at any time!
(PS: I can't get that column vector times a row vector to equal the 'H' matrix to display properly. Sorry.)
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