Weak Interactions violate Lorentz?

In summary, the Lorentz group is isomorphic to SU_L(2) x SU_R(2) in fermions. However, in the Standard Model, only left-handed neutrinos interact with matter, which violates Lorentz symmetry. This is due to the weak interaction only coupling to the left-handed neutrinos. The weak interaction also breaks the discrete symmetries of space-time, but only the proper orthochronous Lorentz transform is necessary for the causality structure to hold. The Standard Model also has a famous structure for the weak interaction, and for massive neutrinos, there is mixing and flavor oscillations. However, there is no need to introduce right-handed neutrinos for mixing, as it can also happen with
  • #1
ChrisVer
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I was wondering.
For fermions someone can find that the Lorentz group is isomorphic to [itex]SU_L(2) \times SU_R(2) [/itex].
However in the Standard Model there is only left-handed neutrinos interacting with the rest of matter. If Lorentz was not partially violated, wouldn't someone expect for the left and right-fermions interacting in the same way?
Or am I missing something?
 
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  • #2
Why do you think a gamma5 violates Lorentz invariance? And if your answer is "it doesn't", my next question will be "Why do you think a 1+gamma5 violates Lorentz invariance?"
 
  • #3
Neither does.. But why then the SM doesn't have right-handed fermions as it has left-handed ones [and in particular neutrinos]?
The distinction appears when somebody said that weak interactions only couple to the left-handed neutrinos... So I'm saying that for some reason somebody breaks the symmetry between left and right ( which is the Lorentz symmetry)...
If Lorentz symmetry was still held, then someone could write the same interactions for the right handed as he did for the left handed, with the same couplings. Weak interactions however, concerning neutrinos, change this symmetry, and tells you "ah, the left is the "nice one" whereas the right vanishes"
 
  • #4
ChrisVer said:
some reason somebody breaks the symmetry between left and right ( which is the Lorentz symmetry)

No, it's not. That's parity. The SM breaks parity, but it does not break Lorentz invariance.
 
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  • #5
That's it: The weak interaction breaks P, C, CP, and due to the CPT theorem then also T invariance. These are all discrete symmetries of space-time, and there's no need for them to hold in nature. The only thing that's really important on a very fundamental ground is that the causality structure of space-time holds, and for this it's sufficient that the variation of the action is invariant under the part of the Poincare group that is simply connected with the neutral element of that group, and that's the proper orthochroneous Lorentz transform.

As soon as parity (spatial-reflection symmetry) is violated, a spin-1/2 particle needs not be represented necessarily by a Dirac spinor but also a Weyl spinor is sufficient, and the two kinds of Weyl spinors corresponding to the irreducible representations of the covering group of the Lorentz group, SL(2,C), labelled as the (1/2,0) and (0,1/2) representations, correspond to the left- and right-handed parts (particles of definite chirality) of the Dirac spinor ##(1\mp \gamma^5)/2 \psi##.

In the standard model the weak interaction has the famous structure (vector current minus axial vector current), and thus only the left-handed part of the neutrinos and the right-handed part of the antineutrinos couples to the "massive leptons". In the approximation of massless neutrinos, there are only left-handed neutrinos and right-handed anti-neutrinos in the game.

For massive neutrinos, there is also mixing as in the quark sector, i.e., the flavor-eigenstates are not the mass eigenstates, which gives rise to neutrino oscillations.
 
  • #6
vanhees71 said:
That's it: The weak interaction breaks P, C, CP, and due to the CPT theorem then also T invariance. These are all discrete symmetries of space-time, and there's no need for them to hold in nature. The only thing that's really important on a very fundamental ground is that the causality structure of space-time holds, and for this it's sufficient that the variation of the action is invariant under the part of the Poincare group that is simply connected with the neutral element of that group, and that's the proper orthochroneous Lorentz transform.


Right; just so I am clear - as the OP somewhat alludes, the Standard Model is *not* in fact invariant under *all* Lorentz transformations, only the proper orthochronous ones, that is, SO+(1,3), not SO(1,3).
 
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  • #7
kurros said:

Right; just so I am clear - as the OP somewhat alludes, the Standard Model is *not* in fact invariant under *all* Lorentz transformations, only the proper orthochronous ones, that is, SO+(1,3), not SO(1,3).

That is correct. That's why people call the proper inhomogenous Lorentz group (or the proper Poincare group) the fundamental symmetry group of flat 1+3 spacetime. The C,P,T discrete symmetries are thus purely of phenomenologic nature. However, as soon as one turns to serious (Wightman) QFT, then TCP (all three at the same time) is another symmetry of the SM as well, along with the proper Poincare one. These 2 symmetries limit the bare Lagrangian densities, along with known experimental facts.
 
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  • #8
vanhees71 said:
In the standard model the weak interaction has the famous structure (vector current minus axial vector current), and thus only the left-handed part of the neutrinos and the right-handed part of the antineutrinos couples to the "massive leptons". In the approximation of massless neutrinos, there are only left-handed neutrinos and right-handed anti-neutrinos in the game.

For massive neutrinos, there is also mixing as in the quark sector, i.e., the flavor-eigenstates are not the mass eigenstates, which gives rise to neutrino oscillations.

Just to chime in a bit for clarification: Even for massive neutrinos, there is no a priori need to introduce right-handed neutrinos into the game even if it is one (rather attractive) option. Lepton and quark mixing is related to a mismatch of the up and down type fermion mass matrices, which can also happen for pure Majorana neutrinos (e.g., in a type-II seesaw).
 
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  • #9
dextercioby said:
That is correct. That's why people call the proper inhomogenous Lorentz group (or the proper Poincare group) the fundamental symmetry group of flat 1+3 spacetime. The C,P,T discrete symmetries are thus purely of phenomenologic nature.

So, perhaps the question is "Why does QCD preserve parity"? We can always argue that U(1) electromagnetism preserves parity by design, because it is the unbroken piece of a non-preserving interaction. But QCD?
 
  • #10
The U(1) is not really the "unbroken piece" - it's a mix of the w3 and the bino, and as such is every bit as much a part of the breaking as the Z.

If you start with Weyl fields and put the left multiplets of the quarks in an SU(3) color triplet, if you want your theory to be anomaly free and to leave the leptons colorless, you need to put the right multiplets into the same triplet (within a rotation, but that rotation can be phased away by redefining the triplet basis states).
 
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  • #11
if you want your theory to be anomaly free and to leave the leptons colorless, you need to put the right multiplets into the same triplet

So, for instance, QCD with only left quarks is anomalous? Is this true for every SU(N)?
 
  • #12
No, but if you have both handednesses, they need to either carry the same charges (like real QCD) or be neutral (like a wacky chiral QCD).
 
  • #13
Vanadium 50 said:
No, but if you have both handednesses, they need to either carry the same charges (like real QCD) or be neutral (like a wacky chiral QCD).

I am a bit lost. Are you speaking of electric charge or colour charge?. My question is if it is possible to have a QCD where the strong coupling for right-handed quarks is not the same that for left-handed quarks. Is such coupling anomalous, or were you just speaking of electric charge?EDIT: From table III here, it would seem that the complex N-dim representation of SU(N) is always anomalous, but I am not sure if I am reading it correctly. http://inspirehep.net/record/11544?ln=es
 
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  • #14
arivero said:
My question is if it is possible to have a QCD where the strong coupling for right-handed quarks is not the same that for left-handed quarks.

You have only two choices. Either the left and right-handed versions contain the same color charges, or only one does and the other is color-neutral. The reason is that the sum of the charges for every interaction needs to sum to zero over the all the fields in the theory.
 
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  • #15
Orodruin said:
Just to chime in a bit for clarification: Even for massive neutrinos, there is no a priori need to introduce right-handed neutrinos into the game even if it is one (rather attractive) option. Lepton and quark mixing is related to a mismatch of the up and down type fermion mass matrices, which can also happen for pure Majorana neutrinos (e.g., in a type-II seesaw).
Sure. I hope that there will be clear evidence whether neutrinos are Majorana or Dirac fermions soon. I think KATRIN should get into this business 2015 too in addition to the mass measurement with the tritium decay spectrum endpoint, right?
 
  • #16
Vanadium 50 said:
You have only two choices. Either the left and right-handed versions contain the same color charges, or only one does and the other is color-neutral. The reason is that the sum of the charges for every interaction needs to sum to zero over the all the fields in the theory.

I am still a bit lost. Which is the "sum of charges" for colour charge, and how is it that it is zero in the two cases you mention?
 
  • #17
Arivero, this is not really a side point anymore but is growing to a full-scale thread derailment. It probably deserves its own thread. Further, it's clear that your are finding what I am saying confusing, so it's unlikely that another message from me will help.
 
  • #18
the sum is taken over the generators (or charges) in these cases [as it's taken for the hypercharges in U(1)]...
 
  • #19
Vanadium 50 said:
Arivero, this is not really a side point anymore but is growing to a full-scale thread derailment. It probably deserves its own thread. Further, it's clear that your are finding what I am saying confusing, so it's unlikely that another message from me will help.

No, no, it is the same thread. Once we have fixed, in the few first comments, that what the OP calls "to violate Lorentz" is really parity violation, then the question becomes "why can the electroweak theory violate parity?". And the answer seems to be that it can because there are complex representations which are, by a fortunate combination of charges, anomaly free. To understand it better, we ask if there are some theories that, having complex representations, can not violate parity. It is not a derailment; it is further study of the OP question.
 
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  • #20
So, to clear this up, do we have the breaking of [itex]SU(2)_L \times SU(2)_R [/itex] by the violation of parity?
 
  • #21
The weak interaction breaks parity, the strong and electromagnetic don't. The ##\mathrm{SU}(2)_L \times \mathrm{SU}(2)_R## symmetry stands for the accidental approximate chiral symmetry of the light-quark sector (u- and d-quarks taken as "light") which is in addition to its explicit breaking by the small current-quark masses (small compared to the relevant hadronic scale ##4 \pi f_{\pi} \simeq 1 \; \mathrm{GeV}##) also spontaneously broken to ##\mathrm{SU}(2)_V## (iso-spin symmetry). The explicit breaking of iso-spin symmetry is as large as the breaking of chiral symmetry because of the current-quark mass difference.

The electroweak chiral symmetry is a local gauge symmetry based on the weak isospin, which is grouped together with the weak hypercharge to the local gauge group ##\mathrm{SU}(2)_\text{wiso} \times \mathrm{U}(1)_{\text{wY}}##, which is spontaneously broken to ##\mathrm{U}(1)_{\text{em}}##.
 

1. What are weak interactions?

Weak interactions are one of the four fundamental forces of nature, along with gravity, electromagnetism, and strong interactions. They are responsible for the decay of subatomic particles, such as protons and neutrons, and play a crucial role in nuclear reactions.

2. How do weak interactions violate Lorentz invariance?

Lorentz invariance is the principle that the laws of physics should be the same for all observers moving at constant velocities. Weak interactions violate this principle because they only affect particles with left-handed spin, and not particles with right-handed spin. This asymmetry in behavior violates the symmetry of Lorentz invariance.

3. Why is it important to study weak interactions?

Studying weak interactions helps us understand the nature of matter and how the universe works at the smallest scales. It also has practical applications in nuclear energy, medical imaging, and particle accelerators.

4. How do we know that weak interactions violate Lorentz invariance?

Experiments, such as the Double-slit experiment and the Wu experiment, have shown that weak interactions exhibit a preference for left-handed spin particles. This preference violates the symmetry of Lorentz invariance and supports the theory that weak interactions violate this principle.

5. Can we observe the effects of weak interactions violating Lorentz invariance in everyday life?

No, the effects of weak interactions violating Lorentz invariance are only observable at the subatomic level. The violation is very small and is only significant when dealing with particles moving at high speeds or in extreme conditions, such as in a particle accelerator.

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