Low degree Lorentz invariant polynomials as potential entanglement invariants for multiple Dirac spinors

Abstract

A system of multiple spacelike separated Dirac particles is considered and a method for constructing polynomial invariants under the spinor representations of the local proper orthochronous Lorentz groups is described. The method is a generalization of the method used in [Phys. Rev. A 105, 032402 (2022), arXiv:2103.07784] for the case of two Dirac particles. All polynomials constructed by this method are identically zero for product states. The behaviour of the polynomials under local unitary evolution that acts unitarily on any subspace defined by fixed particle momenta is described. By design all of the polynomials have invariant absolute values on this kind of subspaces if the evolution is locally generated by zero-mass Dirac Hamiltonians. Depending on construction some polynomials have invariant absolute values also for the case of nonzero-mass or additional couplings. Because of these properties the polynomials are considered potential candidates for describing the spinor entanglement of multiple Dirac particles, with either zero or arbitrary mass or additional couplings. Polynomials of degree 2 and 4 are derived for the cases of three and four Dirac spinors. For three spinors no non-zero degree 2 polynomials are found but 67 linearly independent polynomials of degree 4 are identified. For four spinors 16 linearly independent polynomials of degree 2 are constructed as well as 26 polynomials of degree 4 selected from a much larger number. The relations of these polynomials to the polynomial spin entanglement invariants of three and four non-relativistic spin-12 particles are described. Moreover, it is described how degree 4 polynomials for five spinors can be constructed and how degree 2 polynomials can be constructed for any even number of spinors.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…