Dirac Spinors and Spin Groups
Previously, we introduced Weyl spinors, which are two-component complex vectors that represent the state of a spin-1/2 particle. Crucially, Weyl spinors are chiral—there are left-handed Weyl spinors and right-handed Weyl spinors. In this section, we will explore Dirac spinors, which are four-component complex vectors that can represent both left-handed and right-handed Weyl spinors. Then, we will discuss various group theoretical aspects of spinors, including double covers and spin groups.
Table of Contents
Introduction
When we deal with spin-1/2 particles, we need to consider both left-handed and right-handed Weyl spinors. Is there a way to keep the two Weyl spinors together in a single object?
Recall that we have left-handed Weyl spinors
To combine them, we first need to make both Weyl spinors column vectors. We can do this by taking the transpose of the right-handed Weyl spinors to get
Finally, we can combine the two Weyl spinors into a single four-component complex vector, known as a Dirac spinor:
As shown above, the Dirac spinor is a four-component complex vector that combines both left-handed and right-handed Weyl spinors.
The top two components represent the left-handed Weyl spinor and transform with
The matrix
is a Dirac spinor transformation matrix in the Weyl basis. Evidently, it is a block diagonal matrix, where the top-left block corresponds to the left-handed Weyl spinor and the bottom-right block corresponds to the right-handed Weyl spinor. We say that it belongs to the direct sum of the two Weyl spinor representations;
The Dirac spinor is often denoted as a single letter
which describes the behavior of spin-1/2 particles in quantum field theory.
Double Covers
We will now formalize our understanding of double covers.
In the past, we have seen that for every
Similarly, we have seen that for every Lorentz transformation, there are two
The idea of double covers has a topological perspective.
Recall that for
As such, we say that the 1-sphere
The act of projection maps every point
Now let's generalize to two dimensions.
For
In two dimensions, projection maps every point
For three dimensions, we have
The 3-sphere
The result of this is that we have three independent parameters, which we can think of as the angles of a rotation in three dimensions. Then, the last parameter is fixed by the constraint that the sum of the squares equals one.
Following the same pattern, we expect projection to act on a vector as
Correspondence Between S³, RP³, SU(2), and SO(3)
With this in mind, we now consider the correspondence between these spaces and the groups we have seen so far.
We can now show that
One can easily verify that unitary matrices in
where
We can replace
As such, we can see that the set of all unitary matrices in
Simply Connectedness
Another property of the groups is that
A simply connected space has the geometric interpretation that it has no holes. More formally, if, for any loop in the space, we can continuously shrink it to a point without leaving the space, then the space is simply connected. For example, the surface of a sphere is simply connected, while the surface of a torus is not.
For
SL(2, C) Double Cover of SO⁺(1, 3)
In four-dimensional spacetime, we have the Lorentz group
As we have seen, for any