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Revista mexicana de física

versión impresa ISSN 0035-001X

Rev. mex. fis. vol.67 no.1 México ene./feb. 2021  Epub 31-Ene-2022

https://doi.org/10.31349/revmexfis.67.25 

Research

High Energy Physics

Little group generators for Dirac neutrino one-particle states

R. Romero1 

1Departamento de Ciencias Naturales, Unidad Cuajimalpa, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Av. Vasco de Quiroga 4871. Colonia, Santa Fe Cuajimalpa, Alcaldía Cuajimalpa de Morelos, Ciudad de México, México 05348. e-mail: rromero@correo.cua.uam.mx


Abstract

Assuming neutrinos to be of the Dirac type, the little group generators for the one-particle states, created off the vacuum by the field operator, are obtained, both in terms of the one-particle states themselves and in terms of creation/annihilation operators. It is shown that these generators act also as rotation operators in the Hilbert space of the states, providing three types of transformations: a helicity flip, the standard charge conjugation, and a combination of the two, up to phases. The transformations’ properties are provided in detail and their physical implications discussed. It is also shown that one of the transformations continues to hold for chiral fields without mixing them. It is argued that these results provide support for the Majorana nature of massive neutrinos.

Keywords: Neutrinos; little group; one-particle states; majorana

PACS: 03.70.+k; 11.30.-j; 11.30.Cp; 14.60.Lm

1.Introduction

It is now established that neutrinos oscillate in flavor and are therefore massive 1-7, and one fundamental aspect still unresolved is the determination of their nature, whether they are Dirac or Majorana particles 8-12. Perturbative calculations do not help in this regard because of the vanishing small ratio m/E that all differences between the two types are proportional to 10,13-15. Experimentally, the observation of neutrinoless double beta decay processes would confirm their Majorana nature, and there are already various types of experiments, both planned and underway, set up with that purpose 16-21. However, the non-observation of such processes do not necessarily imply that neutrinos are of the Dirac type 22. On the theoretical side, Majorana neutrinos are preferred because they are central in the various types of the see-saw mechanism 23-29, and also in leptogenesis models 30-32.

Associated with the nature of neutrinos is the question of lepton-number conservation. Let us consider mass eigenstates for both neutrino types. These are one-particle states of definite energy and momentum created off the vacuum by the relevant field operator. In terms of creation operators, ap (bp) for Dirac neutrinos (anti-neutrinos) and a^p for Majorana neutrinos, the alternatives are, respectively,

a-pb+p, (1)

a^+pa^-p, (2)

where the subscripts ± respectively denotes positive and negative helicity. Thus, if lepton number conservation holds, different helicity neutrinos and anti-neutrinos are different particles (Dirac case), and Eq. (1) is the right choice (there is also a-pb+p, but these modes have not been observed). On the other hand, if lepton number is violated neutrinos and anti-neutrinos are just two helicity states of the same particle (Majorana case), and Eq. (2) is the right one. Neutrinos and anti-neutrinos are related by the anti-unitary and discrete CPT transformation (charge conjugation, parity and time reversal) . If νp,h represents a Dirac neutrino with momentum p an helicity h then, setting the overall phase to one, for simplicity, we have

ν(p,h)CPTν¯(p,-h), (3)

where ν¯p,-h is the anti-neutrino with the same momentum and opposite helicity. For the Majorana case the CPT transformation just reverses the helicity

ν(p,h)CPTν(p,-h). (4)

In this work we take Eq. (1) as the premise and consider neutrino and anti-neutrino one-particles states, labeled by their momentum and helicity. That is, we restrict the discussion to the Hilbert space of the free one-particle states of a given momentum, created off the vacuum by the relevant field operator, which in the case of Dirac neutrinos it is four dimensional. Let us, for now, generically denote them by p,h (they will be properly defined in the next section). They are degenerate in the four-momentum eigenvalues and, in particular, if H is the Hamiltonian operator we have

Hp,h=Epp,h, (5)

with Ep=p2+m2. Now let us consider a unitary transformation U such that

Up,h=αp,h', (6)

where a is a phase, α2=1. That is, U transforms the one-particle states among themselves. Then it is easy to see that HU-UHp,h=0. Thus,

U,H=0, (7)

and we conclude by Eqs. (5) and (6) that U is a unitary transformation leaving the four-momentum invariant, which is precisely the definition of a little group transformation33-36. Since there are four one-particle states, two helicity values for each of the neutrino and the anti-neutrino, there are three different types of unitary transformations we can consider, these are: a transformation that flips the helicity without mixing particles and anti-particles, the standard charge conjugation and a combination of these two. Also, because the one-particle states are fermionic and massive, the little group is SU(2), the rotation group for SL(1, C) in the 1/2,00,1/2 representation34,36.

It is the purpose of this paper to define the U transformations, both in terms of the one-particle states themselves and in terms of creation/annihilation operators, and exhibit their properties, which are of physical interest. Among other properties, we show that the transformations are Hermitian besides being unitary, and that they do indeed satisfy the SU(2) Lie algebra. Physically, the three transformations correspond to helicity flip, charge conjugation and a combination of the two, up to phases. This last transformation will be also shown to hold for chirally projected fields.

The organization is as follows: We first present the states, operators, and spinors and establish the conventions in section II, we then proceed to present and discuss the three unitary transformations in Sec. 3, first in terms of the one-particle states, assuming a finite volume quantization, and then in terms of creation/annihilation operators, which is more fundamental. In Sec. 4 we show that the Dirac field operator, both for the unconstrained case and for the left-chiral one, is consistently transformed under one of the little group transformations. Finally, we further discuss the physical implications of the results and provide concluding remarks.

2.Free field conventions

Let us assume that a free massive neutrino is of the Dirac type, so that Eq. (1) holds. It is thus described by a massive Dirac field operator, here given in the helicity basis 37

Ψx=d3p2π312Eλ=±uλpαλpe-ip.x+uλ(p)bλ(p)eip.x (8)

where the operators a±p, b±p, respectively, create particles and anti-particles of the given helicity, labeled by the subscript, off the vacuum. The equal-time anti-commutation relations are the canonical ones

{Ψα(x),Ψβ(y)}=δ3(x-y)δαβ,{Ψα(x),Ψβ(y)}={Ψα(x),Ψβ(y)}=0,{aλ(p),aλ'(q)}=(2π)3δ3(p-q)δλλ'.{bλ(p),bλ'(q)}=(2π)3δ3(p-q)δλλ'. (9)

The one-particle sates

p,-=a-p0,p,+=a+p0,p¯,-=b-p0,p¯,+=b+p0, (10)

correspondingly represent left- and right-handed i neutrinos, and left- and right-handed anti-neutrinos, with the anti-particle states distinguished by an over bar, and 0 denoting the free vacuum state.

The bispinors in the field expansion in Eq. (8) are expressed in terms of the two-component Weyl spinors

ξ+(p)=(e-iφ2cos(θ2)eiφ2sin(θ2)),ξ-(p)=(-e-iφ2sin(θ2)eiφ2cos(θ2)), (11)

which satisfy σp^ξλ(p)=λξλ(p), λ=±, with three-momentum p^=p/p=sinθcosφ,sinθsinφ,cosθ. Explicitly

uλp=E-λpξλpE+λpξλp,vλp=-λE+λpξ-λpλE-λpξ-λp, (12)

and they are normalized according to the relations

u¯λpuλ'p=2mδλ,λ'v¯λpvλ'p=-2mδλ,λ'u¯λpvλ'p=v¯λpuλ'p=0. (13)

Here, the over bar represents the Dirac adjoint u¯uγ0. The bispinors satisfy the momentum-space Dirac equations (p-m)uλ(p)=0 and (p+m)vλ(p)=0, with pγμpμ. We use the Weyl representation of the gamma matrices, as given in Ref. 38.

The Hamiltonian, momentum, and lepton-number operators are respectively given by

H=d3p(2π)3λ=±Ep(aλ(p)aλ(p)+bλ(p)bλ(p)), (14)

P=d3p(2π)3λ=±p(aλ(p)aλ(p)+bλ(p)bλ(p)), (15)

L=d3p(2π)3λ=±(aλ(p)aλ(p)-bλ(p)bλ(p)). (16)

3.Little group transformations

3.1.One-particle states

To simplify calculations and obtain a rapid overview of the transformations let us for now resort to a discrete volume quantization11, so that the one-particle states in Eq. (10) can be taken orthonormal. It is then straightforward to consider operators of the form αhh'p,hp,h', with αhh' adequately chosen phases so that the operators are unitary and satisfy the SU(2) algebra. These constitute the U operators in Eqs. (5) and (6). Then we have

U1=i|p,-p,+-ip,+p,--ip-,-p-,++ip-,+p-,-|, (17)

U2=|p,-p,-|+|p-,-p,-|+|p,+p-,+|+|p-,+p,+|, (18)

U2=|p,+p-,|-|+|p-,-p,-|+|p,+p-,+|+|p-,+p,+|, (19)

which respectively produce

U1|p,-=-i|p,+,U1|p,+=i|p,-,U1|p¯,-=i|p¯,+,U1|p¯,+=-i|p¯,-, (20)

U2|p,-=|p¯,-,U2|p,+=|p¯,+,U2|p¯,-=|p,-,U2|p¯,+=|p,+, (21)

U3|p,-=-|p¯,+,U3|p,+=|p¯,-,U3|p¯,-=|p,+,U3|p¯,+=-|p,-. (22)

To further establish their properties, it is easier to work with a matrix representation, obtained from the matrix elements

-,pUip,-+,pUip,--,p¯Uip,-+,p¯Uip,--,pUip,++,pUip,+-,p¯Uip,++,p¯Uip,+-,pUip¯,-+,pUip¯,--,p¯Uip¯,-+,p¯Uip¯,--,pUip¯,++,pUip¯,+-,p¯Uip¯,++,p¯Uip¯,+. (23)

Thus,

U1=0-i00i000000i00-i0, (24)

U2=0010000110000100, (25)

U3=000-100100100-1000. (26)

Where, with a slight abuse of notation, we label the matrix representation with the same symbol as the corresponding operator. With these matrices, the following properties are readily verified

Ui-1=Ui,Ui=Ui,detUi=1,trUi=0,H,Uj=0,Ui,Uj=2iεijkUk.i=1,2,3 (27)

Being both unitary and Hermitian, the transformations are also observables. The second last property follows from comparing Eqs. (17) to (19) with Eq. (6) and using Eqs. (5) and (7). This property verifies that the transformations leave the four-momentum invariant and are conserved. The last property establishes that the transformations fulfill the SU(2) algebra, so they can be identified with the little group generators. In this regard they are analogous to the Pauli matrices that play the dual role of being SU(2) generators and 2π rotation operators for spin 1/2 particles.

The transformation’s physical content is read directly from Eqs. (20) - (22): U1 flips the helicity without mixing particles and anti-particles, U2 is charge conjugation with the conventional phases (38), and U3 is a combination of the previous two, up to a phase. Thus, U3 relates particles and anti-particles with opposite helicities and, in particular, connects a LH neutrino one-particle state with a RH anti-neutrino one.

We also emphasize that, being a little group rotation, the transformation does not flip the three-momentum, as it would necessarily be the case for a CP (charge conjugation and parity) transformation 11 40. In fact, using the standard transformation properties of the one-particle states under CPT, we see from Eq. (22) that, up to phases, U3 produces the same outcome as a CPT transformation. This, of course, does not mean that these two operators are equivalent, since the later is a discrete and anti-unitary spacetime transformation, while the former is a rotation in spin-space.

We can readily verify the commutation properties between the little group rotations with CP and CPT. Setting phase factors to one for simplicity, e.g., CPp,-=-p¯,+ and CPTp,-=p¯,+, and remembering we are restricting the discussion to the Hilbert state of the free one-particle states, we obtain using Eq. (22)

U3CPp,-=--p,-,CPU3p,-=--p,-. (28)

Analogously,

U3CPTp,-=-p,-,CPTU3p,-=-p,-. (29)

Hence,

U3,CP=U3,CPT=0. (30)

Similar results hold for U1 and U2, so we conclude

Ui,CP=Ui,CPT=0,i=1,2,3. (31)

3.2.Creation and annihilation operators

The little group rotations can also be given in terms of creation and annihilation operators. They are

U1=exp(-iπ2)expiπ2d3p2π3a++pa-p+a-pa+p+b+pb-p+b-(p)b+(p)×iπ2d3p2π3a-pa-p-a++pa+p+b++pb+p-b-(p)b-(p) (32)

U2=expiπ2d3p2π3λ=±bλp-aλ(p)×aλp-bλ(p) (33)

U3=expiπ2d3p2π3a-p+b++(p)×a-p+b+(p)+b-p-a++(p)×a+p-b-(p) (34)

where we have again slightly abused the notation and keep the same labels for the transformations. Acting on the creation operators they give

U1a-pU1=-ia+p,U1a+pU1=ia-p,U1b-pU1=ib+p,U1b+pU1=-ib-p, (35)

U2a-pU2=b-p,U2a+pU2=b+p,U2b-pU2=a-p,U2b+pU2=a+p, (36)

U3a-pU3=-b+p,U3a+pU3=b-p,U3b-pU3=a+p,U3b+pU3=-a-p. (37)

From Eqs. (32) - (34) it is clear that Ui0=0, i = 1,2,3, with 0 the vacuum state, then the one-particle state transformations in Eqs. (20) - (22) follow from Eqs. (35) - (37). Explicit construction of U3 and its action is provided in the appendix. It is also straightforward to verify that, as required, the transformations commute with the Hamiltonian and the momentum operators in Eqs. (14) and (15)

H,Ui=[P,Ui]=0i=1,2,3. (38)

U2 and U3 anti-commute with the lepton-number operator in Eq. (16)

L,Ui=0i=2,3, (39)

while U1 commutes with it. It can also be shown that the anti-commutation relations remain invariant under the transformations (the case for U3 is shown in the appendix).

Ui{Ψα(x),Ψβ(y)}Ui=δ3(x-y)δαβ,i=1,2,3. (40)

4. Field operator transformation

In this section we show that the Dirac field operator is consistently transformed under U3, both for the unconstrained field and the chirally projected one.

4.1.Unconstrained field

The Dirac field in Eq. (8) is consistently transformed under U3 by appropriately transforming the bispinors. For that purpose, let us consider the rotation matrix that implements a counterclockwise rotation by an angle 2φ around the positive pz axis

R(p)=RC00RC=exp-i2φΣ32, (41)

with Σ3 being the third component of

Σ=σ00σ,

and Rc the SU(2) matrix

RC=e-iφ00eiφ=exp-i2φσ32 (42)

yielding

RCξ±*(p)=ξ±(p) (43)

on the two-component spinors. Analogously, the matrix R(p) in Eq. (41) produces, for the bispinors

R(p)uλ*p=uλp,R(p)vλ*p=vλp. (44)

We also make use of the chiral matrix

γ5=iγ0γ1γ2γ3=-1001, (45)

and the relations

-γ5uλp=λv-λp,-γ5vλp=-λu-λp. (46)

Combining Eqs. (44) and (46) we get

-γ5R(p)uλ*p=λv-λp,-γ5R(p)vλ*p=-λu-λp. (47)

The field transformation is then obtained from Eqs. (8), (37) and (47) as

U3Ψ(x)U3=-γ5R(p)Ψ*(x), (48)

and it constitutes a consistent transformation of the field operator, since its right-hand side induces a transformation of the Dirac equation in momentum-space: from

-γ5R(p)(p*-m)(-γ5R(p))=-(p+m)

and Eq. (47) we get

(p-m)uλ(p)=0-γ5R(p)K(p+m)v-λ(p)=0, (49)

where K represents the operation of conjugating to the right. We also have that a second application of the U3 transformation corresponds to no transformation at all, as can be seen from Eq. (37) and the fact that

-γ5R(p)K-γ5R(p)K=-γ5R(p)×-γ5R(p)*=1

The case for U2, being the charge conjugation operator, is textbook matter, and the case for U1 proceeds in a similar fashion.

4.2.Chirally projected field

Let us apply the chiral projection operators L=1/21-γ5 and R=1/21+γ5 to the field expansion in Eq. (8), to obtain

ΨLx=d3p2π312Ea+pe-ip.x+b-+(p)eip.x×ξ+pE-p+a-pe-ip.x-b+(p)eip.x×ξ-(p)E+p (50)

ΨRx=d3p2π312Ea+pe-ip.x-b-(p)eip.x×ξ+pE+p+a-peip.x+b+(p)eip.x×ξ-(p)E-p (51)

We thus see that each chiral field and its Hermitian conjugate produce both helicity states, and we can continue to use the one-particle states in Eq. (10), with one set for each chirality.

In the high energy limit, with Em, states with weight E-pm/2E are suppressed, while the ones with E+p2E are favored, so in general, and if helicity is not measured, a left-chiral neutrino of energy E produced by the weak interaction will be in a superposition of both helicities. It can then be described by the density matrix 8

ρν(E)=E+p2Ep,-p,-+E-p2Ep,+p,+. (52)

The anti-neutrino density matrix is accordingly given by

ρν¯(E)=E+p2Ep¯,+p¯,++E-p2Ep¯,-p¯,-, (53)

and from Eq. (22) we have

U3ρν(E)U3=ρν¯(E), (54)

and in particular we can again conclude that a LH neutrino and a RH anti-neutrino, created by a left-chiral field, are connected by the U3 transformation.

For the field operator in Eq. (50) we get, using Eqs. (37) and (43)

U3ΨL(x)U3=RCΨL*(x), (55)

so the left-chiral field transforms appropriately under U3. On the other hand, U2 mixes the chiral fields, as it must for charge conjugation

U2ΨL(x)U2=-iσ2ΨR*(x). (56)

As for U1 it is not possible to obtain a consistent transformation of the fields and at the same time maintain the SU(2) algebra, so this transformation is lost for chiral fields.

5.Concluding remarks

We have obtained the little group generators, which act also as symmetry operators, for massive Dirac neutrino one-particle states, provided their properties in detail and discuss their physical interpretations. The most interesting result comes from U3 because it connects a LH neutrino state with a RH anti-neutrino one, by a rotation in spin space that violates lepton number conservation. The other two transformations involve states that have not been observed, namely a RH-neutrino and a LH anti-neutrino, but which are in principle not precluded by any fundamental consideration. Regarding U2, which as stated is just the standard charge conjugation operator, what we have obtained is consistent with the fact that this transformation is actually an internal transformation, not related to spacetime at all.

Let us consider U2 and U3 for free charged fermions. In this case charge conjugation is also a symmetry of the free theory since it commutes with the Hamiltonian, but of course this does not imply that a charged fermion can spontaneously change to its anti-fermion, since such a process is precluded by the charge conservation selection rule. The same applies for U3. No such selection rule exists for strictly neutral fermions so, to the extent that the transformations here presented are superseded by charge conservation, these apply only to strictly neutral, elementary fermions, of which the neutrino is the only particle known to exist so far, in the free theory. The elementary part is guaranteed by the fundamental aspect of the field and the use of one-particle states created off the vacuum by the field operator.

As for lepton number, even though total lepton number has never been observed to be violated, it is a classical global symmetry, and there is a priori no reason, either from unitarity, renormalizability, or otherwise, that prevents it to be broken by quantum effects. Flavor lepton number, on the other hand, is already known to be violated by the flavor basis in neutrino oscillations.

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1i.In this work, the terms left-handed (LH) and right-handed (RH) always refer to helicity , respectively.

Appendix

A. Realization of the U3 transformation

In this appendix we explicitly derive Eq. (37). Let us consider the unitary transformations

(A.1)

with α and β real numbers, and A and B the Hermitian operators

(A.2)

(A.3)

Then, using the operator identity

A^B^,C^=A^B^,C^-A^,C^B^,

we have

A,a-p=-a-p,

A,A,a-p=a-p,

and so on recursively. Thus, by the BakerCampbellHausdorff relation we get ω^1a-pω^1=a-pe-iα. Performing analogous calculations for the rest of the operators, and choosing α=π/2, yields

(A.4)

As for the B operator we get

B,a-p=-b+p,

B,B,a-p=a-p,

and so on recursively, yielding

ω^2a-pω^2=a-pcosβ-ib+psinβ.

Performing analogous calculations for the rest of the operators, and choosing β=π/2, result in

(A.5)

Now, with the help of the identity

A^B^,C^D^=A^B^,C^D^-A^,C^B^D^+C^A^B^,D^-C^A^,D^B^,

it is straightforward to check that the operators A and B commute and so, with α=β=π/2, we have ω^1ω^2=expi(π/2)A+B=U3, with U3 given in Eq. (34), and where the last equality is directly verified after factorizing. Thus, combining Eqs. (A.4) and (A.5) and taking the Hermitian conjugate, Eq. (37) follows directly.

To check the invariance of the equal-time anti-commutation relations let us define the unitary matrix

(A.6)

with n^=-sinφ,cosφ,0. Using Eqs. (41) and (42) it is straightforward to check that Γγ0=-γ5R(p). Then the rhs of Eq. (48) is rewritten as

(A.7)

Thus,

(A.8)

Received: February 24, 2020; Accepted: June 26, 2020

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