Physics of roller coasters

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In mathematical physics, higher-dimensional gamma matrices are the matrices which satisfy the Clifford algebra

{Γa,Γb}=2ηabIN

with the metric given by

η=ηab=diag(+1,1,,1)

where a,b=0,1,,d1 and IN the identity matrix in N=2[d/2] dimensions.

They have the following property under hermitian conjugation

Γ0=+Γ0,Γi=Γi(i=1,,d1)

Charge conjugation

Since the groups generated by Γa, ΓaT, ΓaT are the same we deduce from Schur's lemma that there must exist a similarity transformation which connects them. This transformation is generated by the charge conjugation matrix. Explicitly we can introduce the following matrices

C(+)ΓaC(+)1=+ΓaT
C()ΓaC()1=ΓaT

They can be constructed as real matrices in various dimensions as the following table shows

D C(+)*=C(+) C()*=C()
2 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1 C()T=C();C()2=1
3 C()T=C();C()2=1
4 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1 C()T=C();C()2=1
5 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1
6 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1 C()T=C();C()2=1
7 C()T=C();C()2=1
8 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1 C()T=C();C()2=1
9 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1
10 C(+)T=C(+);C(+)2=1 C()T=C();C()2=1
11 C()T=C();C()2=1

Symmetry properties

A Γ matrix is called symmetric if

(CΓa1an)T=+(CΓa1an)

otherwise it is called antisymmetric. In the previous expression C can be either C(+) or C(). In odd dimension there is not ambiguity but in even dimension it is better to choose whichever one of C(+) or C() which allows for Majorana spinors. In D=6 there is not such criterion and therefore we consider both.

D C Symmetric Antisymmetric
3 C() γa I2
4 C() γa,γa1a2 I4,γchir,γchirγa
5 C(+) Γa1a2 I4,Γa
6 C() I8,ΓchirΓa1a2,Γa1a2a3 Γa,Γchir,ΓchirΓa,Γa1a2
7 C() I8,Γa1a2a3 Γa,Γa1a2
8 C(+) I16,Γa,Γchir,ΓchirΓa1a2a3,Γa1a4 ΓchirΓa,Γa1a2,ΓchirΓa1a2,Γa1a2a3
9 C(+) I16,Γa,Γa1a4,Γa1a5 Γa1a2,Γa1a2a3
10 C() Γa,Γchir,ΓchirΓa,Γa1a2,ΓchirΓa1a4,Γa1a5 I32,ΓchirΓa1a2,Γa1a2a3,Γa1a4,ΓchirΓa1a2a3
11 C() Γa,Γa1a2,Γa1a5 I32,Γa1a2a3,Γa1a4

Example of an explicit construction in chiral base

We construct the Γ matrices in a recursive way, first in all even dimensions and then in odd ones.

d = 2

We take

γ0=σ1,γ1=iσ2

and we can easily check that the charge conjugation matrices are

C(+)=σ1=C(+)*=s(2,+)C(+)T=s(2,+)C(+)1s(2,+)=+1
C()=iσ2=C()*=s(2,)C()T=s(2,)C()1s(2,)=1

We can also define the hermitian chiral γchir to be

γchir=γ0γ1=σ3=γchir

generic even d = 2k

We now construct the Γa ( a=0,d+1) matrices and the charge conjugations C(±) in d+2 dimensions starting from the γa (a=0,,d1) and c(±) matrices in d dimensions. Explicitly we have

Γa=γaσ3(a=0,,d1),Γd=I(iσ1),Γd+1=I(iσ2)

Then we can construct the charge conjugation matrices

C(+)=c()σ1,C()=c(+)(iσ2)

with the following properties

C(+)=C(+)*=s(d+2,+)C(+)T=s(d+2,+)C(+)1s(d+2,+)=s(d,)
C()=C()*=s(d+2,)C()T=s(d+2,)C()1s(d+2,)=s(d,+)

Starting from the values for d=2, s(2,+)=+1,s(2,)=1 we can compute all the signs s(d,±) which have a periodicity of 8, explicitly we find

d=8k d=8k+2 d=8k+4 d=8k+6
s(d,+) +1 +1 −1 −1
s(d,) +1 −1 −1 +1

Again we can define the hermitian chiral matrix in d+2 dimensions as

Γchir=αd+2Γ0Γ1Γd1=γchirσ3αd=id/21

which is diagonal by construction and transforms under charge conjugation as

C(±)ΓchirC(±)1=βd+2ΓchirTβd=()d(d1)/2

generic odd d = 2k + 1

We consider the previous construction for d1 (which is even) and then we simply take all Γa (a=0,,d2) matrices to which we add Γd1=iΓchir ( the i is there in order to have an antihermitian matrix).

Finally we can compute the charge conjugation matrix: we have to choose between C(+) and C() in such a way that Γd1 transforms as all the others Γ matrices. Explicitly we require

C(s)ΓchirC(s)1=βdΓchirT=sΓchirT