Charge conjugation is a new symmetry in nature.
To each particle there is an antiparticle and, in particular, the
existence of electrons implies the existence of positrons.
In the hole theory, the absence of an energy and the absence of a
charge
, is equivalent to the presence of a positron of positive
energy
and charge
.
For an electron of negative energy
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(5.233) |
For a positron, , with positive energy
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(5.234) |
We look for an operator transforming the two equations into each
other.
Taking the complex conjugate of the Dirac equation, multiplying by ,
and remembering that
is real, we have
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(5.235) |
We look for a nonsingular matrix, , such that
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(5.236) |
If this is the case, we have
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(5.237) |
with
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(5.238) |
being the positron wave function. In our representation we can see that
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(5.239) |
or explicitly
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|
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Therefore
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(5.240) |
or
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(5.241) |
Since
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(5.242) |
must commute with
and
, and anti-commute with
and
.
Therefore we try
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(5.243) |
and see
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(5.244) |
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(5.245) |
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(5.246) |
It suffices to be able to construct a matrix in any given
representation since a unitary transformation to any other
representation when applied to this
will give a matrix appropriate
to the new representation.
We note also that there is a phase arbitrariness in our definition of
.
We thus have the charge conjugate solution
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(5.247) |
Lets consider an example. For a negative-energy electron at rest with spin down.
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(5.248) |
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(5.249) |
The absence of a spin-down negative-energy electron at rest is equivalent to the presence of a spin-up positive-energy positron at rest.
Noticing
and recalling that
, we applying the transformation
to an arbitrary spin-momentum eigenstate,
,
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|
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||
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||
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||
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(5.250) |
We see that the operation yields from a negative-energy solution
described by 4-vector and polarization
, a
positive-energy solution with the same
and
.
In terms of free-particle spinors
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(5.251) |
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(5.252) |
Therefore and
are charge-conjugate spinors, within a
phase factor of
.
Notice that
does not change sign under charge conjugation but the
spin does reverse.
The operator
explicitly constructs the
wave function of a positron.
We may develop from it an invariance operation for the Dirac equation
by defining the additional operator which changes the spin of the
electromagnetic field.
The instructions for this operator are:
This is a formal symmetry of the Dirac theory.
it transforms the Dirac equation for an electron into the same
equation for a positron and is called the charge conjugation
transformation .
describes a particle with the same mass and spin direction,
but with opposite charge, opposite sign of energy and opposite sign of
momentum.
Both
and
propagate forward in time.
If a spin-1/2 particle is its own anti-particle, it is a ``Marjoriana
fermion''.
The neutrino is the only possible candidate for such a particle from the
known elementary particles.