In theoretical physics, Van der Waerden notation[1][2] refers to the usage of two-component spinors (Weyl spinors) in four spacetime dimensions. This is standard in twistor theory and supersymmetry. It is named after Bartel Leendert van der Waerden.
Dotted indices
edit- Undotted indices (chiral indices)
Spinors with lower undotted indices have a left-handed chirality, and are called chiral indices.
- Dotted indices (anti-chiral indices)
Spinors with raised dotted indices, plus an overbar on the symbol (not index), are right-handed, and called anti-chiral indices.
Without the indices, i.e. "index free notation", an overbar is retained on right-handed spinor, since ambiguity arises between chirality when no index is indicated.
Hatted indices
editIndices which have hats are called Dirac indices, and are the set of dotted and undotted, or chiral and anti-chiral, indices. For example, if
then a spinor in the chiral basis is represented as
where
In this notation the Dirac adjoint (also called the Dirac conjugate) is
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Van der Waerden B.L. (1929). "Spinoranalyse". Nachr. Ges. Wiss. Göttingen Math.-Phys. ohne Angabe: 100–109.
- ^ Veblen O. (1933). "Geometry of two-component Spinors". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 19 (4): 462–474. Bibcode:1933PNAS...19..462V. doi:10.1073/pnas.19.4.462. PMC 1086023. PMID 16577541.
References
edit- Spinors in physics
- P. Labelle (2010), Supersymmetry, Demystified series, McGraw-Hill (USA), ISBN 978-0-07-163641-4
- Hurley, D.J.; Vandyck, M.A. (2000), Geometry, Spinors and Applications, Springer, ISBN 1-85233-223-9
- Penrose, R.; Rindler, W. (1984), Spinors and Space–Time, vol. 1, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-24527-3
- Budinich, P.; Trautman, A. (1988), The Spinorial Chessboard, Springer-Verlag, ISBN 0-387-19078-3