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Chirality (physics)



 
 
A phenomenon is said to be chiral if it is not identical to its mirror image
Mirror Image

"Mirror Image" is an episode of the television series The Twilight Zone ....
 (see Chirality
Chirality (mathematics)

In geometry, a figure is chiral if it is not identical to its mirror image, or more particularly if it cannot be mapped to its mirror image by rotations and translations alone....
). The spin
Spin (physics)

In quantum mechanics, spin is a fundamental property of atomic nucleus, hadrons, and elementary particles. For particles with non-zero spin, spin direction is an important intrinsic degrees of freedom ....
 of a particle may be used to define a handedness (aka chirality
Chirality

Chirality, or "handedness", is a property of asymmetry important in several branches of science.An object or a system is chiral if it cannot be wikt:superposed on its mirror image....
) for that particle. A symmetry transformation between the two is called parity
Parity (physics)

In physics, a parity transformation is the flip in the sign of one spatial coordinate. In three dimensions, it is also commonly described by the simultaneous flip in the sign of all spatial coordinates:...
. The action of parity acting on a Dirac fermion
Dirac fermion

In particle physics, a Dirac fermion is a fermion which is not its own anti-particle. It is named for Paul Dirac. All fermions in the Standard Model, except possibly neutrinos, are Dirac fermions....
 is called chiral symmetry.

An experiment on the weak decay of cobalt
Cobalt

Cobalt is a hard, lustrous, grey metal, a chemical element with symbol Co and atomic number 27. Although cobalt-based colors and pigments have been used since ancient times, and miners have long used the name kobold ore for some minerals, cobalt was only discovered in 1735 by Georg Brandt....
-60 nuclei carried out by Chien-Shiung Wu
Chien-Shiung Wu

Chien-Shiung Wu was a China-born United States physicist with an expertise in radioactivity. She worked on the Manhattan Project and disproved the conservation of Parity ....
 and collaborators in 1957 demonstrated that parity is not a symmetry of the universe.

helicity of a particle is Right-handed if the direction of its spin
Spin (physics)

In quantum mechanics, spin is a fundamental property of atomic nucleus, hadrons, and elementary particles. For particles with non-zero spin, spin direction is an important intrinsic degrees of freedom ....
 is the same as the direction of its motion.






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A phenomenon is said to be chiral if it is not identical to its mirror image
Mirror Image

"Mirror Image" is an episode of the television series The Twilight Zone ....
 (see Chirality
Chirality (mathematics)

In geometry, a figure is chiral if it is not identical to its mirror image, or more particularly if it cannot be mapped to its mirror image by rotations and translations alone....
). The spin
Spin (physics)

In quantum mechanics, spin is a fundamental property of atomic nucleus, hadrons, and elementary particles. For particles with non-zero spin, spin direction is an important intrinsic degrees of freedom ....
 of a particle may be used to define a handedness (aka chirality
Chirality

Chirality, or "handedness", is a property of asymmetry important in several branches of science.An object or a system is chiral if it cannot be wikt:superposed on its mirror image....
) for that particle. A symmetry transformation between the two is called parity
Parity (physics)

In physics, a parity transformation is the flip in the sign of one spatial coordinate. In three dimensions, it is also commonly described by the simultaneous flip in the sign of all spatial coordinates:...
. The action of parity acting on a Dirac fermion
Dirac fermion

In particle physics, a Dirac fermion is a fermion which is not its own anti-particle. It is named for Paul Dirac. All fermions in the Standard Model, except possibly neutrinos, are Dirac fermions....
 is called chiral symmetry.

An experiment on the weak decay of cobalt
Cobalt

Cobalt is a hard, lustrous, grey metal, a chemical element with symbol Co and atomic number 27. Although cobalt-based colors and pigments have been used since ancient times, and miners have long used the name kobold ore for some minerals, cobalt was only discovered in 1735 by Georg Brandt....
-60 nuclei carried out by Chien-Shiung Wu
Chien-Shiung Wu

Chien-Shiung Wu was a China-born United States physicist with an expertise in radioactivity. She worked on the Manhattan Project and disproved the conservation of Parity ....
 and collaborators in 1957 demonstrated that parity is not a symmetry of the universe.

Chirality and helicity

The helicity of a particle is Right-handed if the direction of its spin
Spin (physics)

In quantum mechanics, spin is a fundamental property of atomic nucleus, hadrons, and elementary particles. For particles with non-zero spin, spin direction is an important intrinsic degrees of freedom ....
 is the same as the direction of its motion. It is Left-handed if the directions of spin and motion are opposite. By convention for rotation, a standard clock
Clock

A clock is an instrument used for indicating and maintaining the time and passage thereof. The word clock is derived ultimately from the Celtic languages words clagan and clocca meaning "bell"....
, tossed with its face directed forwards, has Left-handed helicity. Mathematically, helicity is the sign of the projection of the spin
Spin (physics)

In quantum mechanics, spin is a fundamental property of atomic nucleus, hadrons, and elementary particles. For particles with non-zero spin, spin direction is an important intrinsic degrees of freedom ....
 vector onto the momentum
Momentum

In classical mechanics, momentum is the product of the mass and velocity of an object . For more accurate measures of momentum, see the section Momentum#Modern definitions of momentum on this page....
 vector: Left is negative, Right is positive.

The chirality of a particle is more abstract. It is determined by whether the particle transforms in a right or left-handed representation of the Poincaré group
Poincaré group

In physics and mathematics, the Poincar? group, named after Henri Poincar?, is the group of isometry of Minkowski spacetime. It is a 10-dimensional compact space Lie group....
. (However, some representations, such as Dirac spinor
Dirac spinor

In quantum field theory, Dirac spinor is the bispinor in the Plane wave solutionof the free Dirac equation,where is a relativistic spin-1/2 Field ,...
s, have both right and left-handed components. In cases like this, we can define projection operators that project out either the right or left hand components and discuss the right and left-handed portions of the representation.)

For massless particles — such as the photon
Photon

In physics, the photon is an elementary particle, the quantum of the electromagnetic field and the basic unit of light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation....
, the gluon
Gluon

Gluons are elementary particles that cause quarks to interact, and are indirectly responsible for the binding of protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei....
, and the (hypothetical) graviton
Graviton

In physics, the graviton is a hypothetical elementary particle that mediates the force of gravity in the framework of quantum field theory. If it exists, the graviton must be Mass in special relativity and must have a spin of 2 ....
 — chirality is the same as helicity
Helicity (particle physics)

In particle physics, helicity is the projection of the Spin onto the direction of momentum, :Because the eigenvalues of spin with respect to an axis has discrete values, the eigenvalues of helicity are also discrete....
; a given massless particle appears to spin in the same direction along its axis of motion regardless of point of view of the observer.

For particles that do have mass — such as electron
Electron

The electron is a subatomic particle that carries a negative electric charge. It has elementary particle and is believed to be a point particle....
s, quark
Quark

Quarks are a type of elementary particle and major constituents of matter. They are the only particles in the Standard Model to experience all four fundamental interaction, which are also known as fundamental interactions....
s, and neutrino
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
s — chirality and helicity must be distinguished. In the case of these particles, it is possible for an observer to change to a reference frame that overtakes the spinning particle, in which case the particle will then appear to move backwards, and its helicity (which may be thought of as 'apparent chirality') will be reversed.

A massless particle moves with the speed of light
Speed of light

The speed of light in an free space is an important physical constant usually written as c, with a value of 299,792,458 metres per second....
, so a real observer (who must always travel at less than the speed of light
Speed of light

The speed of light in an free space is an important physical constant usually written as c, with a value of 299,792,458 metres per second....
) cannot be in any reference frame where the particle appears to reverse its relative direction, meaning that all real observers see the same chirality. Because of this, the direction of spin of massless particles is not affected by a Lorentz boost (change of viewpoint) in the direction of motion of the particle, and the sign of the projection (helicity) is fixed for all reference frames: the helicity is a relativistic invariant.

With the discovery of neutrino oscillation
Neutrino oscillation

Neutrino oscillation is a quantum mechanics phenomenon predicted by Bruno Pontecorvo whereby a neutrino created with a specific lepton flavor can later be Quantum measurement to have a different flavor....
, which implies that neutrinos have mass
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
, the only observed massless particle is the photon
Photon

In physics, the photon is an elementary particle, the quantum of the electromagnetic field and the basic unit of light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation....
. The gluon
Gluon

Gluons are elementary particles that cause quarks to interact, and are indirectly responsible for the binding of protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei....
 also is expected to be massless, although the assumption that it is massless has not been tested. Hence, these are the only two particles now known for which helicity could be identical to chirality, and only one that has been confirmed by measurement. All other observed particles have mass and thus may have different helicities in different reference frames. It is still possible that as-yet unobserved particles, like the graviton
Graviton

In physics, the graviton is a hypothetical elementary particle that mediates the force of gravity in the framework of quantum field theory. If it exists, the graviton must be Mass in special relativity and must have a spin of 2 ....
, might be massless, and hence have invariant helicity like the photon
Photon

In physics, the photon is an elementary particle, the quantum of the electromagnetic field and the basic unit of light and all other forms of electromagnetic radiation....
. It is also not known for certain that the gluon
Gluon

Gluons are elementary particles that cause quarks to interact, and are indirectly responsible for the binding of protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei....
 is actually massless, it is only supposed; all that is certain from measurement is that if it is not zero then its mass must be very small. Because of confinement
Colour confinement

Color confinement, often called just confinement, is the physics phenomenon that color charged particles cannot be isolated singularly, and therefore cannot be directly observed....
, observation of gluon
Gluon

Gluons are elementary particles that cause quarks to interact, and are indirectly responsible for the binding of protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei....
s is complicated and difficult; it may be that they cannot exist as a free particle and only come in bound state
Bound state

In physics, a bound state is a composite of two or more building blocks that behaves as a single object. In quantum mechanics , a bound state is a state in the Hilbert space that corresponds to two or more particles whose interaction energy is negative, and therefore these particles cannot be separated unless energy is spent....
s called glueball
Glueball

In particle physics, a glueball is a hypothetical composite subatomic particle. It solely consists of gluon particles, without valence quarks. Such a state is possible because gluons carry color charge and experience the strong interaction....
s.

Chiral theories

It has been observed that only left-handed fermion
Fermion

In particle physics, fermions are subatomic particle which obey Fermi-Dirac statistics; they are named after Enrico Fermi. In contrast to bosons, which have Bose-Einstein statistics, only one fermion can occupy a quantum state at a given time; this is the Pauli Exclusion Principle....
s interact with the weak interaction. In most circumstances, two left-handed fermion
Fermion

In particle physics, fermions are subatomic particle which obey Fermi-Dirac statistics; they are named after Enrico Fermi. In contrast to bosons, which have Bose-Einstein statistics, only one fermion can occupy a quantum state at a given time; this is the Pauli Exclusion Principle....
s interact more strongly than right-handed or opposite-handed fermions. Experiments sensitive to this effect imply that the universe has a preference for left-handed chirality, which violates a symmetry of the other forces of nature.

Chirality for a Dirac fermion
Fermionic field

In quantum field theory, a fermionic field is a quantum field whose quanta are fermions; that is, they obey Fermi-Dirac statistics. Fermionic fields obey canonical anticommutation relations rather than the canonical commutation relations of bosonic fields....
 ? is defined by the operator ?5
Gamma matrices

In mathematical physics, the gamma matrices, , also known as the Dirac matrices, form a matrix-valued representation of a set of orthogonal basis vectors for contravariant vectors in space time, from which can be constructed a Clifford algebra....
, which has eigenvalues ±1. Any Dirac field can therefore be projected into its left- or right-handed component by the operation of the projection operator (1–?5)/2 or (1+?5)/2 acting on ?. The coupling of the weak interaction to fermions is proportional to such a projection operator, which is responsible for its parity symmetry
Parity (physics)

In physics, a parity transformation is the flip in the sign of one spatial coordinate. In three dimensions, it is also commonly described by the simultaneous flip in the sign of all spatial coordinates:...
 violation.

A common source of confusion is due to conflating this operator with the helicity
Helicity

The term helicity has several meanings in physics, all referring to a phenomenon that resembles a helix. See:*helicity *helicity *magnetic helicity...
 operator. Since the helicity of massive particles is frame-dependent, it might seem that the same particle would interact with the weak force according to one frame of reference, but not another. The resolution to this paradox is that the chirality operator is equivalent to helicity for massless fields only, for which helicity is not frame-dependent. For massive particles, chirality is not the same as helicity so there is no frame dependence of the weak interaction: a particle that interacts with the weak force does so in every frame.

A theory that is asymmetric between chiralities is called a chiral theory, while a parity symmetric theory is sometimes called a vector theory. Most pieces of the Standard Model
Standard Model

The Standard Model of particle physics is a theory of three of the four known fundamental interactions and the elementary particles that take part in these interactions....
 of physics are non-chiral, which may be due to problems of anomaly
Anomaly (physics)

In quantum physics an anomaly or quantum anomaly is the failure of a symmetry of a theory's classical action to be a symmetry of any regularization of the full quantum theory....
 cancellation in chiral theories. Quantum chromodynamics
Quantum chromodynamics

Quantum chromodynamics is a theory of the strong interaction , a fundamental force describing the interactions of the quarks and gluons making up hadrons ....
 is an example of a vector theory since both chiralities of all quarks appear in the theory, and couple the same way.

The electroweak theory developed in the mid twentieth century is an example of a chiral theory. Originally, it assumed that neutrinos were massless
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
, and only assumed the existence of left-handed neutrino
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
s (along with their complementary right-handed antineutrinos). After the observation of neutrino oscillation
Neutrino oscillation

Neutrino oscillation is a quantum mechanics phenomenon predicted by Bruno Pontecorvo whereby a neutrino created with a specific lepton flavor can later be Quantum measurement to have a different flavor....
s, which imply that neutrinos are massive
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
 like all other fermion
Fermion

In particle physics, fermions are subatomic particle which obey Fermi-Dirac statistics; they are named after Enrico Fermi. In contrast to bosons, which have Bose-Einstein statistics, only one fermion can occupy a quantum state at a given time; this is the Pauli Exclusion Principle....
s, the revised theories of the electroweak interaction now include both right- and left-handed neutrino
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
s. However, it is still a chiral theory, as it does not respect parity symmetry.

The exact nature of the neutrino
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
 is still unsettled and so the electroweak theories that have been proposed are different, but most accommodate the chirality of neutrino
Neutrino

Neutrinos are elementary particles that travel close to the speed of light, lack an electric charge, are able to pass through ordinary matter almost undisturbed and are thus extremely difficult to detect....
s in the same way as was already done for all other fermions.

Chiral symmetry


Vector gauge theories with massless Dirac fermion fields exhibit chiral symmetry
Chiral symmetry

In quantum field theory, chiral symmetry is a possible symmetry in physics of the Lagrangian under which the chirality and chirality parts of Fermionic field#Dirac fields transform independently....
, i.e., rotating the left-handed and the right-handed components independently makes no difference to the theory. We can write this as the action of rotation on the fields:

  and  

or

  and  

With N flavors, we have unitary rotations instead: SU(N)L×SU(N)R.

Massive fermions do not exhibit chiral symmetry. One also says that the mass term in the Lagrangian, breaks chiral symmetry explicitly. Spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking may also occur in some theories, most notably in quantum chromodynamics
Quantum chromodynamics

Quantum chromodynamics is a theory of the strong interaction , a fundamental force describing the interactions of the quarks and gluons making up hadrons ....
.

See also

  • Spinors and Dirac field
    Fermionic field

    In quantum field theory, a fermionic field is a quantum field whose quanta are fermions; that is, they obey Fermi-Dirac statistics. Fermionic fields obey canonical anticommutation relations rather than the canonical commutation relations of bosonic fields....
    s
  • Chiral symmetry
    Chiral symmetry

    In quantum field theory, chiral symmetry is a possible symmetry in physics of the Lagrangian under which the chirality and chirality parts of Fermionic field#Dirac fields transform independently....
  • Electroweak theory
  • Chirality (chemistry)
    Chirality (chemistry)

    The term chiral is used to describe an object that is non-Superposition on its mirror image.Human hands are perhaps the most universally recognized example of chirality: The left hand is a non-superposable mirror image of the right hand; no matter how the two hands are oriented, it is impossible for all the major features of both hands...
  • Chirality (mathematics)
    Chirality (mathematics)

    In geometry, a figure is chiral if it is not identical to its mirror image, or more particularly if it cannot be mapped to its mirror image by rotations and translations alone....