A Symplectic Majorana Spinors in 5 Dimension

Francisca Ramirez
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I need to know if the Symplectic Majorana spinors in 5 dimension have any advantage with respect to the Dirac spinors in 5 dimension, since they have the same number of components. For example if the Symplectic Majorana spinors have a manifested symmetry that the Dirac spinors don't have, or if it's more easy to work with the Symplectic Majorana spinors.
 
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No, i have not see it. I am going to check it.
Thank you!
 
Well, just a small hint: they got their name from a certain symm. property :P

Especially in supergravity, where chirality often is not that important, we like Majorana spinors. In 2,3 and 4 dimensions we can define them, but in 5 dimensions we can't. But we can go the the next best thing: symplectic Majorana. Van Proeyen explains how and why.
 
Tomas Ortin, in appendix D of "Gravity and Strings" (SECOND edition), says
There are no Majorana representations in d = 5, but only pairs of (complex) symplectic-Majorana spinors that can be combined into a single unconstrained Dirac spinor. Doing this, however, hides this structure and makes it more difficult (or impossible) to construct five-dimensional supergravities with the most general couplings. We will show how to deal with these spinors...
but in Australia, Google's preview is limited and doesn't let me see the actual argument.
 
Thank you very mach!
 
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2503.09804 From the abstract: ... Our derivation uses both EE and the Newtonian approximation of EE in Part I, to describe semi-classically in Part II the advection of DM, created at the level of the universe, into galaxies and clusters thereof. This advection happens proportional with their own classically generated gravitational field g, due to self-interaction of the gravitational field. It is based on the universal formula ρD =λgg′2 for the densityρ D of DM...
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