349 research outputs found
Non-Standard Fermion Propagators from Conformal Field Theory
It is shown that Weyl spinors in 4D Minkowski space are composed of primary
fields of half-integer conformal weights. This yields representations of
fermionic 2-point functions in terms of correlators of primary fields with a
factorized transformation behavior under the Lorentz group. I employ this
observation to determine the general structure of the corresponding Lorentz
covariant correlators by methods similar to the methods employed in conformal
field theory to determine 2- and 3-point functions of primary fields. In
particular, the chiral symmetry breaking terms resemble fermionic 2-point
functions of 2D CFT up to a function of the product of momenta. The
construction also permits for the formulation of covariant meromorphy
constraints on spinors in 3+1 dimensions.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, LMU-TPW 94-1
Family Dependence in SU(3)_C X SU(3)_L X U(1)_X models
Using experimental results at the Z-pole and atomic parity violation, we
perform a chi-squared fit at 95% CL to obtain family-dependent bounds to Z_2
mass and Z-Z' mixing angle in the framework of SU(3)_C X SU(3)_L X U(1)_X
models. The allowed regions depend on the assignment of the quark families in
mass eigenstates into the three different families in weak eigenstates that
cancel anomaliesComment: 14 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX2e; added references, added equations with
electroweak corrections for section 4. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Spin and Rotation in General Relativity
Rapporteur's Introduction to the GT8 session of the Ninth Marcel Grossmann
Meeting (Rome, 2000); to appear in the Proceedings.Comment: LaTeX file, no figures, 15 page
Four Dimensional Integrable Theories
There exist many four dimensional integrable theories. They include self-dual
gauge and gravity theories, all their extended supersymmetric generalisations,
as well the full (non-self-dual) N=3 super Yang-Mills equations. We review the
harmonic space formulation of the twistor transform for these theories which
yields a method of producing explicit connections and metrics. This formulation
uses the concept of harmonic space analyticity which is closely related to that
of quaternionic analyticity. (Talk by V. Ogievetsky at the G\"ursey Memorial
Conference I, Istanbul, June 1994)Comment: 11 pages, late
On Beltrami Model of de Sitter Spacetime
Based on some important properties of space, we present a Beltrami model
that may shed light on the observable puzzle of space
and the paradox between the special relativity principle and cosmological
principle. In , there are inertial-type coordinates and
inertial-type observers. Thus, the classical observables can be defined for
test particles and light signals. In addition, by choosing the definition of
simultaneity the Beltrami metric is transformed to the Robertson-Walker-like
metric. It is of positive spatial curvature of order . This is more or
less indicated already by the CMB power spectrum from WMAP and should be
further confirmed by its data in large scale.Comment: 4 page
Physics of Quantum Relativity through a Linear Realization
The idea of quantum relativity as a generalized, or rather deformed, version
of Einstein (special) relativity has been taking shape in recent years.
Following the perspective of deformations, while staying within the framework
of Lie algebra, we implement explicitly a simple linear realization of the
relativity symmetry, and explore systematically the resulting physical
interpretations. Some suggestions we make may sound radical, but are arguably
natural within the context of our formulation. Our work may provide a new
perspective on the subject matter, complementary to the previous approach(es),
and may lead to a better understanding of the physics.Comment: 27 pages in Revtex, no figure; proof-edited version to appear in
Phys.Rev.
The general classical solution of the superparticle
The theory of vectors and spinors in 9+1 dimensional spacetime is introduced
in a completely octonionic formalism based on an octonionic representation of
the Clifford algebra \Cl(9,1). The general solution of the classical
equations of motion of the CBS superparticle is given to all orders of the
Grassmann hierarchy. A spinor and a vector are combined into a
Grassmann, octonionic, Jordan matrix in order to construct a superspace
variable to describe the superparticle. The combined Lorentz and supersymmetry
transformations of the fermionic and bosonic variables are expressed in terms
of Jordan products.Comment: 11 pages, REVTe
Unification via intermediate symmetry breaking scales with the quartification gauge group
The idea of quark-lepton universality at high energies has been introduced as
a natural extension to the standard model. This is achieved by endowing leptons
with new degrees of freedom -- leptonic colour, an analogue of the familiar
quark colour. Grand and partially unified models which utilise this new gauge
symmetry SU(3)_\ell have been proposed in the context of the quartification
gauge group SU(3)^4. Phenomenologically successful gauge coupling constant
unification without supersymmetry has been demonstrated for cases where the
symmetry breaking leaves a residual SU(2)_\ell unbroken. Though attractive,
these schemes either incorporate ad hoc discrete symmetries and
non-renormalisable mass terms, or achieve only partial unification. We show
that grand unified models can be constructed where the quartification group can
be broken fully [i.e. no residual SU(2)_\ell] to the standard model gauge group
without requiring additional discrete symmetries or higher dimension operators.
These models also automatically have suppressed nonzero neutrino masses. We
perform a systematic analysis of the renormalisation-group equations for all
possible symmetry breaking routes from SU(3)^4 --> SU(3)_q x SU(2)_L x U(1)_Y.
This analysis indicates that gauge coupling unification can be achieved for
several different symmetry breaking patterns and we outline the requirements
that each gives on the unification scale. We also show that the unification
scenarios of those models which leave a residual SU(2)_\ell symmetry are not
unique. In both symmetry breaking cases, some of the scenarios require new
physics at the TeV scale, while others do not allow for new TeV phenomenology
in the fermionic sector.Comment: 25 page
From 2D conformal to 4D self-dual theories: quaternionic analyticity
It is shown that self-dual theories generalize to four dimensions both the
conformal and analytic aspects of two-dimensional conformal field theories. In
the harmonic space language there appear several ways to extend complex
analyticity (natural in two dimensions) to quaternionic analyticity (natural in
four dimensions). To be analytic, conformal transformations should be realized
on , which appears as the coset of the complexified conformal group
modulo its maximal parabolic subgroup. In this language one visualizes the
twistor correspondence of Penrose and Ward and consistently formulates the
analyticity of Fueter.Comment: 24 pages, LaTe
Octonions, E6, and Particle Physics
In 1934, Jordan et al. gave a necessary algebraic condition, the Jordan
identity, for a sensible theory of quantum mechanics. All but one of the
algebras that satisfy this condition can be described by Hermitian matrices
over the complexes or quaternions. The remaining, exceptional Jordan algebra
can be described by 3x3 Hermitian matrices over the octonions.
We first review properties of the octonions and the exceptional Jordan
algebra, including our previous work on the octonionic Jordan eigenvalue
problem. We then examine a particular real, noncompact form of the Lie group
E6, which preserves determinants in the exceptional Jordan algebra.
Finally, we describe a possible symmetry-breaking scenario within E6: first
choose one of the octonionic directions to be special, then choose one of the
2x2 submatrices inside the 3x3 matrices to be special. Making only these two
choices, we are able to describe many properties of leptons in a natural way.
We further speculate on the ways in which quarks might be similarly encoded.Comment: 13 pages; 6 figures; TonyFest plenary talk (York 2008
- …