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10 lectures
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classical physics: a physical system is given by the functions of the coordinates and of the associated momenta – 2
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quantum physics: coordinates and momenta are Hermitean operators in the Hilbert space of states 3
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Gauß curve 14
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Symmetry in Quantum Physics 16
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A. external symmetries B. internal symmetries 17
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external symmetries: Poincare group conservation laws: energy momentum angular momentum 18
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external symmetries: exact in Minkowski space 19
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General Relativity: no energy conservation no momentum conservation no conservation of angular momentum 20
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internal symmetries: Isospin SU(3) Color symmetry Electroweak gauge symmetry Grand Unification: SO(10) Supersymmetry 21
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internal symmetries broken by interaction: isospin broken by quark masses: SU(3) broken by SSB: electroweak symmetry unbroken: color symmetry 22
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symmetries are described mathematically by groups 23
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symmetry groups n finite or infinite 24
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examples of groups: integer numbers: 3 + 5=8, 3 + 0=3, 5 + (-5) = 0 real numbers: 3.20 x 2.70=8.64, 3.20 x 1 = 3.20 3.20 x 0.3125 = 1 25
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A symmetry is a transformation of the dynamical variables, which leave the action invariant. 28
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Classical mechanics: translations of space and time – ( energy, momentum ) rotations of space ( angular momentum ) 29
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Special Relativity => Poincare group: translations of 4 space - time coordinates + Lorentz transformations 30
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Symmetry in quantum physics ( E. Wigner, 1930 … ) U: unitary operator 32
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Poincare group P: - time translations - - space translations - - rotations of space - - „rotation“ between time and space - 37
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e.g. rotations of space: - - 38
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Casimir operator of Poincare group 39
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The operator U commutes with the Hamiltonoperator H: If U acts on a wave function with a specific energy, the new wave function must have the same energy ( degenerate energy levels ). 40
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discrete symmetries 42
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P: exact symmetry in the strong and electromagnetic interactions 45
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P: maximal violation in the weak interactions 46
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theory of parity violation: 1956: T. D. Lee and C.N.Yang experiment: Chien-Shiung Wu ( Columbia university ) 48
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Lee Yang Wu 49
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Experiment of Wu: beta decay of cobalt 50
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electrons emitted primarily against Cobalt spin ( violation of parity ) 52
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1958 Feynman, Gell-Mann Marshak, Sudarshan maximal parity violation lefhanded weak currents 53
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CP – violation: weak interactions were CP invariant, until 1964: CP violation found at the level of 0.1% of the parity violation in decay of neutral K-mesons (James Cronin and Val Fitch, 1964 ) 54
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present theory of CP-violation: phase in the mixing matrix of the quarks 55
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V. Weisskopf – W. Pauli (~1933) the Klein-Gordon field is not a wave function, but describes a scalar field 59
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Goudsmit – Uhlenbeck 1924 a new discrete quantum number 69
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angular momentum: 73
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Spin of particles: pi-meson: 0 electron, proton: ½ photon: 1 delta resonance: 3/2 graviton: 2 75
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matter particles have spin ½ => fermions ( electron, proton, neutron ) force particles have spin 1 => bosons ( photon, gluons, weak bosons ) 77
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Klein-Gordon equation: no positive definite probability density exists Dirac 1927: search for a wave equation, in which the time derivative appears only in the first order ( Klein- Gordon equation: second time derivate is needed ) 79
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positron 84
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