In physics, the Pauli–Lubanski pseudovector is an operator defined from the momentum and angular momentum, used in the quantum-relativistic description of angular momentum. It is named after Wolfgang Pauli and Józef Lubański.[1]
It describes the spin states of moving particles. It is the generator of the little group of the Poincaré group, that is the maximal subgroup (with four generators) leaving the eigenvalues of the four-momentum vector invariant.
It is usually denoted by (or less often by) and defined by:where
\varepsilon\mu
J\nu
M\nu
P\sigma
In the language of exterior algebra, it can be written as the Hodge dual of a trivector,
Note
W0=\vec{J} ⋅ \vec{P}
\vec{W}=E\vec{J}-\vec{P} x \vec{K}
\vec{J}
\vec{K}
evidently satisfies
as well as the following commutator relations,
Consequently,
The scalar is a Lorentz-invariant operator, and commutes with the four-momentum, and can thus serve as a label for irreducible unitary representations of the Poincaré group. That is, it can serve as the label for the spin, a feature of the spacetime structure of the representation, over and above the relativistically invariant label for the mass of all states in a representation.
On an eigenspace
S
P
k
p
W
P\mu
k\mu
Lk
k
k
Lk
S
The irreducible unitary representation of the Poincaré group are characterized by the eigenvalues of the two Casimir operators
P2
W2
p
In quantum field theory, in the case of a massive field, the Casimir invariant describes the total spin of the particle, with eigenvalueswhere is the spin quantum number of the particle and is its rest mass.
It is straightforward to see this in the rest frame of the particle, the above commutator acting on the particle's state amounts to ; hence and, so that the little group amounts to the rotation group,Since this is a Lorentz invariant quantity, it will be the same in all other reference frames.
It is also customary to take to describe the spin projection along the third direction in the rest frame.
In moving frames, decomposing into components, with and orthogonal to, and parallel to, the Pauli–Lubanski vector may be expressed in terms of the spin vector = (similarly decomposed) as
whereis the energy–momentum relation.
The transverse components, along with, satisfy the following commutator relations (which apply generally, not just to non-zero mass representations),
For particles with non-zero mass, and the fields associated with such particles,
See main article: article and massless particle.
In general, in the case of non-massive representations, two cases may be distinguished.For massless particles,[2] where is the dynamic mass moment vector. So, mathematically, 2 = 0 does not imply 2 = 0.
In the more general case, the components of transverse to may be non-zero, thus yielding the family of representations referred to as the cylindrical luxons ("luxon" is another term for "massless particle"), their identifying property being that the components of form a Lie subalgebra isomorphic to the 2-dimensional Euclidean group, with the longitudinal component of playing the role of the rotation generator, and the transverse components the role of translation generators. This amounts to a group contraction of, and leads to what are known as the continuous spin representations. However, there are no known physical cases of fundamental particles or fields in this family. It can be argued that continuous spin states possess an internal degree of freedom not seen in observed massless particles.[2]
In a special case,
\vec{W}
\vec{P};
\vec{W} x \vec{P}=\vec{\boldsymbol{0}}.
\vec{W}
\vec{W}
m2\vec{J} ⋅ \vec{P}.
W2=0
W\mu=λP\mu
All particles that interact with the weak nuclear force, for instance, fall into this family, since the definition of weak nuclear charge (weak isospin) involves helicity, which, by above, must be an invariant. The appearance of non-zero mass in such cases must then be explained by other means, such as the Higgs mechanism. Even after accounting for such mass-generating mechanisms, however, the photon (and therefore the electromagnetic field) continues to fall into this class, although the other mass eigenstates of the carriers of the electroweak force (the boson and anti-boson and boson) acquire non-zero mass.
Neutrinos were formerly considered to fall into this class as well. However, because neutrinos have been observed to oscillate in flavour, it is now known that at least two of the three mass eigenstates of the left-helicity neutrinos and right-helicity anti-neutrinos each must have non-zero mass.
. General Principles of Quantum Field Theory. Nikolay Bogolyubov. Springer Verlag. 2nd. 0-7923-0540-X. 1989.
. Lowell S. Brown. Quantum Field Theory. Cambridge University Press. 1994. 978-0-521-46946-3.
. 978-1-139-50432-4. Tommy Ohlsson . Relativistic Quantum Physics: From Advanced Quantum Mechanics to Introductory Quantum Field Theory. Cambridge University Press. 2011.
. Roger Penrose. The Road to Reality. Vintage books. 2005. 978-0-09-944068-0.
. Steven Weinberg . The Quantum Theory of Fields . 1 . . 1995 . 978-0521550017 . registration .