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I bought a book on susy and there is a chapter on spinors in d-dimensions.
Now, maybe I am extremely dumb but I just can't understand the first few lines!
EDIT: I was being very dumb except that I think there is a typo...See below...
BEGINNING OF QUOTE
Consider a d-dimensional vector space V over the field F for which we shall choose two alternatives F=R or F=C. Let Q be a quadratic form on V:
[tex] Q:x \in V \rightarrow Q(x) \in F [/tex]
This defines a symmetric scalar product
[tex] \phi(x,y) \equiv xy + yx = Q(x+y) - Q(x) - Q(y) [/tex]
In particular, for [tex] e_\mu , \mu = 1 \ldots d,[/tex] a basis of V, orthogonal with respect to Q, we then have
[tex]
e_\mu e_\nu + e_\nu e_\mu = 2 \delta_{\mu \nu} Q(e_\mu) \cdot 1 ~~~(3.1)[/tex]
The associative algebra with unit element generated by the [itex] e_\mu [/itex] with the defining relation (3.1) is called the Clifford algebra C(Q) of the quadratic form Q. The dimension of C(Q) is [itex] 2^d [/itex]
END OF QUOTE
Questions:
1) What does it mean to say that the basis is orthogonal with respect to Q? Does that mean [tex] Q(e_\mu + e_\nu) = 0 [/tex] unless mu = nu? Or is that a typo an dhe meant to write orthogonal with respect to [tex] \phi [/tex], not Q?
2) No matter what I try I don't see how to get from the definition of phi to equation 3.1!
EDIT: I THINK I GOT IT
Just as I posted I think that I finally understood.
First, I think the author really meant that the basis is orthogonal with respect to phi and not Q. In that case, we get
[tex] \delta_{\mu \nu} (Q(2 e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu)) [/tex]
since the form is quadratic, this gives
[tex] \delta_{\mu \nu} (4 Q( e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu)) = 2 \delta_{\mu \nu} Q(e_\mu)[/tex]
For some reason it just clicked after I posted my question!
Now, maybe I am extremely dumb but I just can't understand the first few lines!
EDIT: I was being very dumb except that I think there is a typo...See below...
BEGINNING OF QUOTE
Consider a d-dimensional vector space V over the field F for which we shall choose two alternatives F=R or F=C. Let Q be a quadratic form on V:
[tex] Q:x \in V \rightarrow Q(x) \in F [/tex]
This defines a symmetric scalar product
[tex] \phi(x,y) \equiv xy + yx = Q(x+y) - Q(x) - Q(y) [/tex]
In particular, for [tex] e_\mu , \mu = 1 \ldots d,[/tex] a basis of V, orthogonal with respect to Q, we then have
[tex]
e_\mu e_\nu + e_\nu e_\mu = 2 \delta_{\mu \nu} Q(e_\mu) \cdot 1 ~~~(3.1)[/tex]
The associative algebra with unit element generated by the [itex] e_\mu [/itex] with the defining relation (3.1) is called the Clifford algebra C(Q) of the quadratic form Q. The dimension of C(Q) is [itex] 2^d [/itex]
END OF QUOTE
Questions:
1) What does it mean to say that the basis is orthogonal with respect to Q? Does that mean [tex] Q(e_\mu + e_\nu) = 0 [/tex] unless mu = nu? Or is that a typo an dhe meant to write orthogonal with respect to [tex] \phi [/tex], not Q?
2) No matter what I try I don't see how to get from the definition of phi to equation 3.1!
EDIT: I THINK I GOT IT
Just as I posted I think that I finally understood.
First, I think the author really meant that the basis is orthogonal with respect to phi and not Q. In that case, we get
[tex] \delta_{\mu \nu} (Q(2 e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu)) [/tex]
since the form is quadratic, this gives
[tex] \delta_{\mu \nu} (4 Q( e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu) - Q(e_\mu)) = 2 \delta_{\mu \nu} Q(e_\mu)[/tex]
For some reason it just clicked after I posted my question!
Last edited: