shereen1 said:
Dear All
I just have a question. We say that the SU(2) doublet have the same value of isospin but the particles of this multiplet differs by I3.
This is because [itex]SU(2)[/itex] is a
rank-1 group: Only the representation matrix of [itex]J_{3}[/itex] is
diagonal. This allows us to picture each irreducible representation, also called multiplet or the manifold of states,
[tex]|j , m = -j\rangle , |j , m = -j +1\rangle , \cdots , |j , m = j-1\rangle , |j , m = +j\rangle ,[/tex]
by one-dimensional graph (
line) with equally spaced points [itex](j,m)[/itex] representing the [itex](2j+1)[/itex] states [itex]| j , m \rangle[/itex]
[tex]J^{2}|j,m \rangle = j(j+1) |j,m \rangle , \ \ \ J_{3}|j,m \rangle = m |j,m \rangle[/tex]
The raising and lowering operators [itex]J_{\pm}[/itex] move the points [itex](j,m)[/itex] along the line, i.e., they connect states which have the
same [itex]j[/itex] but
different values of [itex]m[/itex]
[tex]J_{\pm}|j,m \rangle = \sqrt{(j \mp m)(j \pm m + 1)} |j , m \pm 1\rangle .[/tex]
Now what quantum number the particles of SU(3) multiplet share.
Thank you
Only the
mass,
spin and
baryon number are the same for each [itex]SU(3)[/itex] multiple.
[itex]SU(3)[/itex] is a
rank-2 group: because there are only
two diagonal generators [itex]\lambda_{3} \equiv T_{3}[/itex] and [itex]\lambda_{8} \equiv \frac{\sqrt{3}}{2} Y[/itex],
[tex][ T_{3} , Y ] = 0 ,[/tex]
the states in an [itex]SU(3)[/itex] irreducible multiplet need
two labels, the eigen-value [itex]t_{3}[/itex] of [itex]T_{3}[/itex] and [itex]y[/itex] of [itex]Y[/itex]. So, we can picture the multiplet by a figure on the [itex]t_{3}-y[/itex]
plane. We can repeat what we did with [itex]SU(2)[/itex] and define the operators
[tex]T_{\pm} = \lambda_{1} \pm i \lambda_{2},[/tex]
which connect states on the [itex]t_{3}[/itex]-axis or any other line parallel to [itex]t_{3}[/itex], i.e., [itex]T_{+}(T_{-})[/itex] raises (lowers) [itex]t_{3}[/itex] by one unit and leaves [itex]y[/itex] unchanged.
So for the horizontal line connecting the [itex]u[/itex] quark, i.e., the point [itex](1/2 , 1/3)[/itex] to the [itex]d[/itex] quark, i.e., the point [itex](-1/2,1/3)[/itex] we have
[tex]T_{+} = | u \rangle \langle d | , \ \ T_{-} = | d \rangle \langle u | ,[/tex] and [tex]2T_{3} = [ T_{+} , T_{-} ] = | u \rangle \langle u | - | d \rangle \langle d | .[/tex] So, you can say that [itex]T_{+} = u^{\dagger}d[/itex] destroys a [itex]d[/itex] quark and creates a [itex]u[/itex] quark. Recalling the electric charge operator
[tex]Q = \frac{2}{3}u^{\dagger}u - \frac{1}{3}d^{\dagger}d - \frac{1}{3}s^{\dagger}s ,[/tex] and using the Gell-Mann-Nishijima relation among [itex]Q[/itex], the diagonal
I-spin generator [itex]T_{3}[/itex] of [itex]SU(2)[/itex] and the hypercharge operator [itex]Y = 2 (Q - T_{3})[/itex], we find
[tex]Y = \frac{1}{3} ( u^{\dagger}u + d^{\dagger}d - 2 s^{\dagger}s ) .[/tex] We can rewrite this in a form which will be useful bellow [tex]d^{\dagger}d - s^{\dagger}s = \frac{3}{2} Y - T_{3} . \ \ \ \ \ \ \ (1)[/tex]
This is not the end of the story, the lines parallel to [itex]t_{3}[/itex] end on two
diagonal lines defined by the remaining two set of raising and lowering operators (there are 3 [itex]SU(2)[/itex] groups living inside [itex]SU(3)[/itex] with old saying :
I spin, you (
U) spin and we (
V) all spin together)
[tex]V_{\pm} = \lambda_{4} \pm i \lambda_{5}, \ \ \ U_{\pm} = \lambda_{6} \pm i \lambda_{7} .[/tex]
[itex]V_{+}[/itex] makes [itex]60[/itex] degree angle with [itex]T_{+}[/itex]. So it raises [itex]t_{3}[/itex] by [itex]1/2[/itex] unit and raises [itex]y[/itex] by [itex]1[/itex] unit; [itex]U_{+}[/itex] makes [itex]120[/itex] degree angle with [itex]T_{+}[/itex]. So it lowers [itex]t_{3}[/itex] by [itex]1/2[/itex] unit and raises [itex]y[/itex] by [itex]1[/itex] unit, etc.
So, graphically each irreducible representation [itex](p,q)[/itex] shows up as a figure with
hexagonal boundary on the [itex]t_{3}-y[/itex] plane: 3 sides having [itex]p[/itex] units of length and the other 3 sides having [itex]q[/itex] units; when either [itex]p = 0[/itex] or [itex]q = 0[/itex], the hexagonal collapses into equilateral triangle [itex](p,0)[/itex] or [itex](0,q)[/itex]. The most important irreducible representations are: the fundamental triplets [itex](0,1) = \{ \bar{3}\}[/itex] and [itex](1,0) = \{3\}[/itex]; the octet (adjoint rep.) [itex]\{8\} = (1,1)[/itex] and the decuplet [itex]\{10\} = (3,0)[/itex].
Again for the
fundamental representation, on the diagonal line connecting [itex]d(-1/2,0)[/itex] with [itex]s(0,-2/3)[/itex] we have
[tex]U_{+} = d^{\dagger} s , \ \ \ U_{-} = s^{\dagger} d .[/tex]
So, we can define a [itex]U_{3}[/itex] for that diagonal line by
[tex]2U_{3} = [ U_{+} , U_{-} ] = d^{\dagger}d - s^{\dagger}s .[/tex]
Now, if we use Eq(1) we get
[tex]2U_{3} = \frac{3}{2}Y - T_{3} = 2 Y - Q .[/tex] From this we conclude that the electric charge [itex]Q[/itex] commutes with [itex]Y , T_{3}[/itex] and [itex]U_{3}[/itex].
The last diagonal line in the equilateral triangle connects [itex]u(1/2,1/3)[/itex] to [itex]s(0,-2/3)[/itex]. Again, we do the same thing. We write down the ladder operators
[tex]V_{+} = u^{\dagger}s , \ \ \ \ V_{-} = s^{\dagger}u ,[/tex] and define a [itex]V_{3}[/itex] for that line by [itex]2V_{3} = [ V_{+} , V_{-}][/itex].
So, along each of the [itex]T, U[/itex] and the [itex]V[/itex] lines, the irreducible representations of [itex]SU(3)[/itex]
decompose into representation of the corresponding [itex]SU(2) \times U(1)[/itex]. In particular, along the horizontal lines we have multiplets of [itex]SU(2)_{T} \times U(1)_{Y}[/itex]. For example, in the adjoint representation [itex](p = 1 , q = 1) = \{8\}[/itex], we have: for the [itex]y = 1[/itex] line
[tex]K^{0}/n = (-1/2,1) , \ \ \ K^{+}/p = (1/2,1) \ : (\vec{1/2}, 1) \in SU(2)_{T} \times U(1)_{Y} .[/tex]
For the line [itex]y = 0[/itex], we get the following states (or points)
[tex]\pi^{-}/ \Sigma^{-} = ( -1,0) , \ \ \pi^{0}/ \Sigma^{0} = (0,0) , \ \ \pi^{+}/ \Sigma^{+} = (1,0) : ( \vec{1},0) \in SU(2)_{T} \times U(1)_{Y} .[/tex]
On this line, there are also the states [itex]\eta^{0} / \Lambda^{0}= (0,0)[/itex] corresponding to [itex](\vec{T} = \vec{0} , Y= 0) \in SU(2)_{T} \times U(1)_{Y}[/itex].
And finally for the [itex]y = -1[/itex] we have
[tex]K^{-}/ \Xi^{-} = (-1/2 , -1) , \ \ \ \bar{K}^{0}/ \Xi^{0} = (1/2 , -1) \ : (\vec{1/2} , -1) \in SU(2)_{T} \times U(1)_{Y} .[/tex]
If you put these points on the [itex]t_{3}-y[/itex] plane you obtain a hexagonal. Of course, the same states and picture can be obtained using the
U-Spin and the
V-Spin operators [itex](U_{\pm}, V_{\pm})[/itex] going diagonally in the [itex]t_{3}-y[/itex] plane.