User:Jheald/sandbox/GA/3D spinors workpage
Some thoughts towards adding a GA-based translation to Spinors in three dimensions
cf. User:Jheald/sandbox/Spinors in two dimensions
Introduction
[edit]Should set out physical significance, most relevantly in the Pauli equation.
+ elsewhere: for finding irreps of SU(2)/SO(3) ?
Representation of the Clifford Algebra
[edit]The signature of the algebra requires
and the Clifford condition requires that
making
These conditions can be fulfilled by using the Pauli matrices σ1, σ2, σ3, so that:
giving
Spinors, per Lounesto
[edit]- (1+e3)(1+e3) = 2 (1+e3)
- so ½(1+e3) is an idempotent
- Lounesto, Clifford Algebras and Spinors (2e, 2001), p. 60, (Google books) gives the example of the projection of Cl3 when right-multiplied by the idempotent ½(1+e3), to give a linear subspace spanned by:
- f0 = ½(1+e3) = ½(1)(1+e3),
- f1 = ½(e23+e2) = ½(e2)(1+e3),
- f2 = ½(e31-e1) = ½(-e13)(1+e3),
- f3 = ½(e12+e123) = ½(e12)(1+e3),
- It is clear we could also choose f0= ½(1)(1+e3), -f2= ½(e1)(1+e3), f1= ½(e2)(1+e3), f3 = ½(e12)(1+e3), to give a spinor subspace isomorphic to Cl2,0(R)
- Evidently, another idempotent we could also have used to project a complex vector would be ½(1-e3)
- Why the preferred choice? Why doesn't ½(1+e2) do just as well ?
- Perhaps we should look at the equivalent 4x4 real matrix representation, and see what happens when we bop off columns. Knocking off 1 column of complex numbers is equivalent to knocking off 2 columns of reals, so lets see what the elements are; it should give us 6 ways to choose 2 from 4, enough to take care of the base choice and the ± choice.
- Using the representation
we get:
and
Not as helpful as I hoped it was going to be. Can't apparently adjust col.1 independently of col.2; and is pretty dense -- hard to identify any subspaces that it creates. Besides, we wouldn't be trying to annul one column (would we?) -- we'd be trying to annul all but one column, to produce our real column vector.
- I guess what we have is that projecting out 1 dimension (a) cuts the size of the Clifford algebra from 2n to 2n-1 elements, and (b) block-zeros one half of the corresponding matrix, by multiplying by something equivalent to the block matrix -- similarly cutting the number of live elements by a factor of 2
- ... curious how all this is discriminating between dimensions with signature +1 and dimensions with signature -1 ...