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5. Direct Products The basis of a system may be the direct product of other basis { j } if The system consists of more than one particle. More than one degrees of freedom of a single particle are considered. Group representation U w.r.t. is therefore a direct product of representations {Uj } w.r.t. { j }. i.e. U is in general reducible. Taking the trace of U(g) gives Decomposition of U is easily done using the charcter table of G.
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Example 17.5.1. Even-Odd Symmetry
Consider system of n particles in potential where Let there be k particles in Au , then i.e., is always irreducible.
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Example 17.5.2. 2 Particles with D3 Symmetry
E.g., 2 valence electrons in a molecule with D3 symmetry. Let both particles be in states of E symmetry ( basis = ). Let The direct product basis is Projectors Mathematica
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6. Symmetric Groups Group of permutations of n objects = Symmetric group Sn . Consider a system of n identical (indistinguishable) particles. Let Pi j be operator that interchanges the positions of the i & j particles. Bosons Fermions P Sn For scalar , only 1-D representations of Sn are needed. Group treatment is essential only for spinor .
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Example 17.6.1. 2 & 3 Fermions Ground state of the 2 electrons of He :
Space part even Spin part odd Streamlined notation: S2 ~ C2 Ground state of the 3 electrons of Li : S3 ~ D3 E : Mathematica see Eg
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Contruction of Let the spin part transforms like the th IR of Sn with basis ( This fixes the multiplicity of ) Let where { i } is a basis for representation U ( ) with i.e. Furthermore, let i.e. U ( ) is the dual of U () U ( ) is an IR since U () is.
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U ( ) is unitary i.e., transforms like A ( Fermionic ) i can be generated from any n-particle function using the projector method.
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Example 17.6.2. Construction of Many-Body Spatial Functions
S3 ~ D3 D3 I C3 C32 C2 C2 C2 S3 P(312) P(231) P(132) = p(32) P(321) = p(31) P(213) = p(21) P(abc) = {1a, 2b, 3c } p(ab) = { a b } Let Results already listed in E.g Mathematica
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7. Continuous Groups Special Rotations in 2-D : Orthogonal
Rotations in n-D : SO(n) = Lie group of order n(n1)/2. ( indep. elements in nn SO matrix ) { R() } = Fundamental representation Generalization to complex vector space: Special Unitary = Lie group of order n21. ( indep. real parameters in nn SU matrix ) Used in classification of elementary particles
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Lie Groups & Their Generators
Lie group of order n = group that is also an n-D differentiable manifold. ( group elements have local 1-1 map to region in Rn.) ~ group with continuous parameters over finite n-D region(s). For elements close to I, Sj = generators for elements “connected” to I. &
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Example 17.7.1. SO(2) Generator
active rep. ( eq is the passive version ) Rotations about a fixed axis : § 2.2, Euler identity :
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SO(n) & SU(n) Sj are hermitian U unitary
Let i be the eigenvalues of U : Sj are traceless
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Let & multiplication is closed f j k l = structure constants Set Can be used to define “identity component” of G. ( f j k l is antisymmetric in its indices.)
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rank of G = max # of mutually commuting independent generators.
Basis of IRs of G are labelled using the eigenvalues of such set of generators. rank of G = # of indices needed to label the basis of an IR. E.g., SO(n) & SU(n) ~ generated by generalized angular momenta For SO(3), rank = 1 IR label = ML . For SU(2), rank = 1 IR label = MS . For SU(3), rank = 2 IR label = ( I3 , Y ) . Casmir operator = operator that commutes with all generators of G. IRs of G are labelled using the eigenvalues of the Casmir operator(s). For SO(3), L2 is the Casmir operator.
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SO(2) & SO(3) For SO(2) For SO(3) §16.4 : see next page
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Basis { x, y } Basis = { i , j } Using functions { x, y } as basis :
generator for V is Alternatively,
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Example 17.7.2. Generators Depend on Basis
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SU(2) & SU(2)-SO(3) Homomorphism
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SU(3)
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Example 17.7.3. Quantum Numbers of Quarks
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Example Quark Ladders
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Example 17.7.5. Generators for Direct Products
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Example 17.7.6. Decomposition of Baryon Multiplets
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8. Lorentz Group
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Homogeneous Lorentz Group
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Example 17.8.1. Addition of Collinear Velocities
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Minkowski Space
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9. Lorentz Covariance of Maxwell’s Equations
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Lorentz Transformation of E & B
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Example 17.9.1. Transformation to Bring Charge to Rest
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10. Space Groups
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Example Tiling a Floor
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