Van der Waerden notation
Notation used for Weyl spinors From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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
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Perspective
- 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
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Perspective
Indices 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
Notes
References
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