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In quantum field theory, a fermionic field is a
quantum field In theoretical physics, quantum field theory (QFT) is a theoretical framework that combines classical field theory, special relativity, and quantum mechanics. QFT is used in particle physics to construct physical models of subatomic particles ...
whose quanta are fermions; that is, they obey Fermi–Dirac statistics. Fermionic fields obey canonical anticommutation relations rather than the
canonical commutation relation In quantum mechanics, the canonical commutation relation is the fundamental relation between canonical conjugate quantities (quantities which are related by definition such that one is the Fourier transform of another). For example, hat x,\hat p_ ...
s of bosonic fields. The most prominent example of a fermionic field is the Dirac field, which describes fermions with spin-1/2:
electron The electron ( or ) is a subatomic particle with a negative one elementary electric charge. Electrons belong to the first generation of the lepton particle family, and are generally thought to be elementary particles because they have no ...
s, protons,
quarks A quark () is a type of elementary particle and a fundamental constituent of matter. Quarks combine to form composite particles called hadrons, the most stable of which are protons and neutrons, the components of atomic nuclei. All commonly ...
, etc. The Dirac field can be described as either a 4-component
spinor In geometry and physics, spinors are elements of a complex vector space that can be associated with Euclidean space. Like geometric vectors and more general tensors, spinors transform linearly when the Euclidean space is subjected to a sligh ...
or as a pair of 2-component Weyl spinors. Spin-1/2 Majorana fermions, such as the hypothetical
neutralino In supersymmetry, the neutralino is a hypothetical particle. In the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), a popular model of realization of supersymmetry at a low energy, there are four neutralinos that are fermions and are electrically ...
, can be described as either a dependent 4-component Majorana spinor or a single 2-component Weyl spinor. It is not known whether the
neutrino A neutrino ( ; denoted by the Greek letter ) is a fermion (an elementary particle with spin of ) that interacts only via the weak interaction and gravity. The neutrino is so named because it is electrically neutral and because its rest mass ...
is a Majorana fermion or a Dirac fermion; observing neutrinoless double-beta decay experimentally would settle this question.


Basic properties

Free (non-interacting) fermionic fields obey canonical anticommutation relations; i.e., involve the
anticommutator In mathematics, the commutator gives an indication of the extent to which a certain binary operation fails to be commutative. There are different definitions used in group theory and ring theory. Group theory The commutator of two elements, ...
s = ''ab'' + ''ba'', rather than the commutators 'a'', ''b''= ''ab'' − ''ba'' of bosonic or standard quantum mechanics. Those relations also hold for interacting fermionic fields in the interaction picture, where the fields evolve in time as if free and the effects of the interaction are encoded in the evolution of the states. It is these anticommutation relations that imply Fermi–Dirac statistics for the field quanta. They also result in the
Pauli exclusion principle In quantum mechanics, the Pauli exclusion principle states that two or more identical particles with half-integer spins (i.e. fermions) cannot occupy the same quantum state within a quantum system simultaneously. This principle was formulat ...
: two fermionic particles cannot occupy the same state at the same time.


Dirac fields

The prominent example of a spin-1/2 fermion field is the Dirac field (named after
Paul Dirac Paul Adrien Maurice Dirac (; 8 August 1902 – 20 October 1984) was an English theoretical physicist who is regarded as one of the most significant physicists of the 20th century. He was the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the Univer ...
), and denoted by \psi(x). The equation of motion for a free spin 1/2 particle is the
Dirac equation In particle physics, the Dirac equation is a relativistic wave equation derived by British physicist Paul Dirac in 1928. In its free form, or including electromagnetic interactions, it describes all spin- massive particles, called "Dirac par ...
, :\left(i\gamma^\mu \partial_\mu - m\right) \psi(x) = 0.\, where \gamma^ are
gamma matrices In mathematical physics, the gamma matrices, \left\ , also called the Dirac matrices, are a set of conventional matrices with specific anticommutation relations that ensure they generate a matrix representation of the Clifford algebra Cl1,3(\ma ...
and m is the mass. The simplest possible solutions \psi(x) to this equation are plane wave solutions, u(p)e^\, and v(p)e^\,. These
plane wave In physics, a plane wave is a special case of wave or field: a physical quantity whose value, at any moment, is constant through any plane that is perpendicular to a fixed direction in space. For any position \vec x in space and any time t, ...
solutions form a basis for the Fourier components of \psi(x), allowing for the general expansion of the wave function as follows, :\psi_(x) = \int \frac \frac \sum_ \left(a^s_\mathbf u^s_(p) e^ + b^_\mathbf v^s_(p) e^\right).\, ''u'' and ''v'' are spinors, labelled by spin, ''s'' and spinor indices \alpha \in \. For the electron, a spin 1/2 particle, ''s'' = +1/2 or s=−1/2. The energy factor is the result of having a Lorentz invariant integration measure. In
second quantization Second quantization, also referred to as occupation number representation, is a formalism used to describe and analyze quantum many-body systems. In quantum field theory, it is known as canonical quantization, in which the fields (typically as ...
, \psi(x) is promoted to an operator, so the coefficients of its Fourier modes must be operators too. Hence, a^_ and b^_ are operators. The properties of these operators can be discerned from the properties of the field. \psi(x) and \psi(y)^ obey the anticommutation relations: :\left\ = \delta^(\mathbf - \mathbf)\delta_. We impose an anticommutator relation (as opposed to a
commutation relation In mathematics, the commutator gives an indication of the extent to which a certain binary operation fails to be commutative. There are different definitions used in group theory and ring theory. Group theory The commutator of two elements, ...
as we do for the bosonic field) in order to make the operators compatible with Fermi–Dirac statistics. By putting in the expansions for \psi(x) and \psi(y), the anticommutation relations for the coefficients can be computed. :\left\ = \left\ = (2\pi)^ \delta^3 (\mathbf - \mathbf) \delta^,\, In a manner analogous to non-relativistic annihilation and creation operators and their commutators, these algebras lead to the physical interpretation that a^_ creates a fermion of momentum p and spin s, and b^_ creates an antifermion of momentum q and spin ''r''. The general field \psi(x) is now seen to be a weighted (by the energy factor) summation over all possible spins and momenta for creating fermions and antifermions. Its conjugate field, \overline \ \stackrel\ \psi^ \gamma^, is the opposite, a weighted summation over all possible spins and momenta for annihilating fermions and antifermions. With the field modes understood and the conjugate field defined, it is possible to construct Lorentz invariant quantities for fermionic fields. The simplest is the quantity \overline\psi\,. This makes the reason for the choice of \overline = \psi^ \gamma^clear. This is because the general Lorentz transform on \psi is not
unitary Unitary may refer to: Mathematics * Unitary divisor * Unitary element * Unitary group * Unitary matrix * Unitary morphism * Unitary operator * Unitary transformation * Unitary representation * Unitarity (physics) * ''E''-unitary inverse semigrou ...
so the quantity \psi^\psi would not be invariant under such transforms, so the inclusion of \gamma^\, is to correct for this. The other possible non-zero
Lorentz invariant In a relativistic theory of physics, a Lorentz scalar is an expression, formed from items of the theory, which evaluates to a scalar, invariant under any Lorentz transformation. A Lorentz scalar may be generated from e.g., the scalar product of ...
quantity, up to an overall conjugation, constructible from the fermionic fields is \overline\gamma^\partial_\psi. Since linear combinations of these quantities are also Lorentz invariant, this leads naturally to the
Lagrangian density Lagrangian may refer to: Mathematics * Lagrangian function, used to solve constrained minimization problems in optimization theory; see Lagrange multiplier ** Lagrangian relaxation, the method of approximating a difficult constrained problem with ...
for the Dirac field by the requirement that the
Euler–Lagrange equation In the calculus of variations and classical mechanics, the Euler–Lagrange equations are a system of second-order ordinary differential equations whose solutions are stationary points of the given action functional. The equations were discovered ...
of the system recover the Dirac equation. :\mathcal_D = \overline\left(i\gamma^\mu \partial_\mu - m\right)\psi\, Such an expression has its indices suppressed. When reintroduced the full expression is :\mathcal_D = \overline_a\left(i\gamma^\mu_ \partial_\mu - m\mathbb_\right)\psi_b\, The
Hamiltonian Hamiltonian may refer to: * Hamiltonian mechanics, a function that represents the total energy of a system * Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics), an operator corresponding to the total energy of that system ** Dyall Hamiltonian, a modified Hamiltonian ...
(
energy In physics, energy (from Ancient Greek: ἐνέργεια, ''enérgeia'', “activity”) is the quantitative property that is transferred to a body or to a physical system, recognizable in the performance of work and in the form of hea ...
) density can also be constructed by first defining the momentum canonically conjugate to \psi(x), called \Pi(x): :\Pi \ \overset\ \frac = i\psi^\dagger\,. With that definition of \Pi, the Hamiltonian density is: : \mathcal_D = \overline\left i\vec \cdot \vec + m\right\psi\,, where \vec is the standard
gradient In vector calculus, the gradient of a scalar-valued differentiable function of several variables is the vector field (or vector-valued function) \nabla f whose value at a point p is the "direction and rate of fastest increase". If the gr ...
of the space-like coordinates, and \vec is a vector of the space-like \gamma matrices. It is surprising that the Hamiltonian density doesn't depend on the time derivative of \psi, directly, but the expression is correct. Given the expression for \psi(x) we can construct the Feynman propagator for the fermion field: : D_F(x - y) = \left\langle 0\left, T(\psi(x) \overline(y))\ 0 \right\rangle we define the
time-ordered In theoretical physics, path-ordering is the procedure (or a meta-operator \mathcal P) that orders a product of operators according to the value of a chosen parameter: :\mathcal P \left\ \equiv O_(\sigma_) O_(\sigma_) \cdots O_(\sigma_). H ...
product for fermions with a minus sign due to their anticommuting nature : T\left psi(x) \overline(y)\right\ \overset\ \theta\left(x^0 - y^0\right) \psi(x) \overline(y) - \theta\left(y^0 - x^0\right) \overline\psi(y) \psi(x). Plugging our plane wave expansion for the fermion field into the above equation yields: : D_F(x - y) = \int \frac \frace^ where we have employed the Feynman slash notation. This result makes sense since the factor :\frac is just the inverse of the operator acting on \psi(x) in the Dirac equation. Note that the Feynman propagator for the Klein–Gordon field has this same property. Since all reasonable observables (such as energy, charge, particle number, etc.) are built out of an even number of fermion fields, the commutation relation vanishes between any two observables at spacetime points outside the light cone. As we know from elementary quantum mechanics two simultaneously commuting observables can be measured simultaneously. We have therefore correctly implemented
Lorentz invariance In a relativistic theory of physics, a Lorentz scalar is an expression, formed from items of the theory, which evaluates to a scalar, invariant under any Lorentz transformation. A Lorentz scalar may be generated from e.g., the scalar product of ...
for the Dirac field, and preserved causality. More complicated field theories involving interactions (such as Yukawa theory, or
quantum electrodynamics In particle physics, quantum electrodynamics (QED) is the relativistic quantum field theory of electrodynamics. In essence, it describes how light and matter interact and is the first theory where full agreement between quantum mechanics and spec ...
) can be analyzed too, by various perturbative and non-perturbative methods. Dirac fields are an important ingredient of the Standard Model.


See also

*
Dirac equation In particle physics, the Dirac equation is a relativistic wave equation derived by British physicist Paul Dirac in 1928. In its free form, or including electromagnetic interactions, it describes all spin- massive particles, called "Dirac par ...
*
Spin–statistics theorem In quantum mechanics, the spin–statistics theorem relates the intrinsic spin of a particle (angular momentum not due to the orbital motion) to the particle statistics it obeys. In units of the reduced Planck constant ''ħ'', all particles tha ...
*
Spinor In geometry and physics, spinors are elements of a complex vector space that can be associated with Euclidean space. Like geometric vectors and more general tensors, spinors transform linearly when the Euclidean space is subjected to a sligh ...


References

* * Peskin, M and Schroeder, D. (1995). ''An Introduction to Quantum Field Theory'', Westview Press. (See pages 35–63.) * Srednicki, Mark (2007).
Quantum Field Theory
', Cambridge University Press, {{ISBN, 978-0-521-86449-7. * Weinberg, Steven (1995). ''The Quantum Theory of Fields'', (3 volumes) Cambridge University Press. Quantum field theory Spinors