Superselection rules and non-observable Hermitian operators

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Superselection rules dictate that not all Hermitian operators can be treated as physical observables due to imposed constraints on the structure of observables in quantum mechanics. These rules arise from the geometry of spacetime, which requires that certain transformations, like full rotations, do not alter the system's properties. Consequently, fermionic and bosonic states become out of phase after such transformations, leading to the conclusion that observable operators must be confined to separate superselection sectors. Operators that cannot be decomposed into these sectors are deemed non-observable, as they would violate the constraints imposed by superselection rules. This fundamentally restricts the types of superpositions allowed in quantum states, particularly affecting the Hamiltonian and other observable operators.
ShayanJ
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Its usually said(like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superselectiond ) that superselection rules imply that not all Hermitian operators can be considered to be physical observables. But I don't understand how that follows. Can someone explain?
Thanks
 
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Superselection means that some form of physical constraint is imposed on the general structure of observables on the Hilbert space.

As an example, the geometry of spacetime implies that rotating a system by one full cycle must not change any properties of the system. The double cover representations in quantum theory however may introduce a phase shift upon such an operation.

Fermions and Bosons will therefore be out of phase after such a rotation has been performed. Since nothing observable (in the future or the past) may change, the Hamiltonian, and with it all measurable quantities, may not depend on any phase difference between a Fermionic and a Bosonic component of the state. The two realisations of the permutation group are therefore said to live in separate superselection sectors. The observable operators then separate into a direct sum of operators on each sector.

Hoper this helps!

Jazz
 
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Jazzdude said:
The observable operators then separate into a direct sum of operators on each sector.
So it implies that any operator which can't be decomposed that way, should not represent an observable. Right?
 
Shyan said:
So it implies that any operator which can't be decomposed that way, should not represent an observable. Right?
Yes.
 
You can put it also a bit differently and say a superselection rule constrains the possible superpositions of states. One example is the "spin selection rule". In usual quantum theory you cannot make superpositions of a state with half-integer and integer spin. Suppose you do so, i.e., having, e.g., ##s_1=1/2## and ##s_2=0## and consider the state
$$|\psi \rangle=|1/2,-1/2 \rangle+|1,-1 \rangle,$$
then the rotation around the ##z## axis by ##2 \pi## does not give ##\exp(\mathrm{i} \varphi) |\psi \rangle## for any real ##\varphi##.

Then of course you have a restriction on the possible operators, representing observables, particularly the Hamiltonian: Such an operator must not mix any half-integer spin state with an integer-spin state and vice versa.
 
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Time reversal invariant Hamiltonians must satisfy ##[H,\Theta]=0## where ##\Theta## is time reversal operator. However, in some texts (for example see Many-body Quantum Theory in Condensed Matter Physics an introduction, HENRIK BRUUS and KARSTEN FLENSBERG, Corrected version: 14 January 2016, section 7.1.4) the time reversal invariant condition is introduced as ##H=H^*##. How these two conditions are identical?

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