Su(2) Lie Algebra in SO(3): Why Choose Omega/2?

sunkesheng
Messages
10
Reaction score
0
hi ,i see from a book su(2) has the form
U\left(\hat{n},\omega\right)=1cos\frac{\omega}{2}-i\sigmasin\frac{\omega}{2}
in getting the relation with so(3),why we choose \frac{\omega}{2},how about changing for \omega?
thank you
 
Physics news on Phys.org
The ½ is there because J_i=\frac 1 2 \sigma_i satisfies the commutation relations [J_i,J_j]=i\epsilon_{ijk}J_k.
 
thanks a lot,but i still cannot understand it ,because the book just gives the equation ,where can i find a detailed derivation?
 
sunkesheng said:
hi ,i see from a book su(2) has the form
U\left(\hat{n},\omega\right)=1cos\frac{\omega}{2}-i\sigmasin\frac{\omega}{2}
in getting the relation with so(3),why we choose \frac{\omega}{2},how about changing for \omega?
thank you

Note that U is an element of Lie group SU(2), not an element of the Lie algebra su(2).

Roughly, there is a factor of 1/2 because of the 2 to 1 relationship between the groups SU(2) and SO(3).
 
George Jones said:
Roughly, there is a factor of 1/2 because of the 2 to 1 relationship between the groups SU(2) and SO(3).
I don't think that's correct, but it's possible that I'm wrong. I think the only point of using SO(3) instead of SU(2) is that it guarantees that we can find an actual representation (with U(R')U(R)=U(R'R) for all R) instead of a projective representation. (If we take R and R' to be members of SO(3), there will sometimes be a minus sign in front of one of the U's).

I think the 1/2 appears only because a rotation operator is always 1-i\theta^iJ_i to first order in the parameters, with the J_i satisfying the usual commutation relations.
 
Fredrik said:
I don't think that's correct, but it's possible that I'm wrong. I think the only point of using SO(3) instead of SU(2) is that it guarantees that we can find an actual representation (with U(R')U(R)=U(R'R) for all R) instead of a projective representation. (If we take R and R' to be members of SO(3), there will sometimes be a minus sign in front of one of the U's).

I think the 1/2 appears only because a rotation operator is always 1-i\theta^iJ_i to first order in the parameters, with the J_i satisfying the usual commutation relations.

There is quite a lot of interesting stuff going on here, and I don't have time to tex it right now, but I stand by my statement. Note that what I wrote doesn't negate anything that you wrote; there are often a number of (somewhat equivalent) ways to look at the same thing.

Maybe in a couple of days I'll write a much longer post.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top