Killing spinor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Killing spinor is a term used in mathematics and physics. By the more narrow definition, commonly used in mathematics, the term Killing spinor indicates those twistor spinors which are also eigenspinors of the Dirac operator.[1][2][3] The term is named after Wilhelm Killing.

Another equivalent definition is that Killing spinors are the solutions to the Killing equation for a so-called Killing number.

More formally:[4]

A Killing spinor on a Riemannian spin manifold M is a spinor field which satisfies
for all tangent vectors X, where is the spinor covariant derivative, is Clifford multiplication and is a constant, called the Killing number of . If then the spinor is called a parallel spinor.

In physics, Killing spinors are used in supergravity and superstring theory, in particular for finding solutions which preserve some supersymmetry. They are a special kind of spinor field related to Killing vector fields and Killing tensors.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Th. Friedrich (1980). "Der erste Eigenwert des Dirac Operators einer kompakten, Riemannschen Mannigfaltigkei nichtnegativer Skalarkrümmung". Mathematische Nachrichten. 97: 117–146. doi:10.1002/mana.19800970111.
  2. ^ Th. Friedrich (1989). "On the conformal relation between twistors and Killing spinors". Supplemento dei Rendiconti del Circolo Matematico di Palermo, Serie II. 22: 59–75.
  3. ^ A. Lichnerowicz (1987). "Spin manifolds, Killing spinors and the universality of Hijazi inequality". Lett. Math. Phys. 13: 331–334. Bibcode:1987LMaPh..13..331L. doi:10.1007/bf00401162. S2CID 121971999.
  4. ^ Friedrich, Thomas (2000), Dirac Operators in Riemannian Geometry, American Mathematical Society, pp. 116–117, ISBN 978-0-8218-2055-1

Books[edit]

External links[edit]