Conformal symmetry

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Conformal symmetry is a property of spacetime that ensures angles remain unchanged even when distances are altered. If you stretch, compress, or otherwise distort spacetime, the local angular relationships between lines or curves stay the same. This idea extends the familiar Poincaré group —which accounts for rotations, translations, and boosts—into the more comprehensive conformal group.

Conformal symmetry encompasses special conformal transformations and dilations. In three spatial plus one time dimensions, conformal symmetry has 15 degrees of freedom: ten for the Poincaré group, four for special conformal transformations, and one for a dilation.

Harry Bateman and Ebenezer Cunningham were the first to study the conformal symmetry of Maxwell's equations. They called a generic expression of conformal symmetry a spherical wave transformation. General relativity in two spacetime dimensions also enjoys conformal symmetry.[1]

Generators

The Lie algebra of the conformal group has the following representation:Template:Sfn

Mμνi(xμνxνμ),Pμiμ,Dixμμ,Kμi(x2μ2xμxνν),

where Mμν are the Lorentz generators, Pμ generates translations, D generates scaling transformations (also known as dilatations or dilations) and Kμ generates the special conformal transformations.

Commutation relations

The commutation relations are as follows:Template:Sfn

[D,Kμ]=iKμ,[D,Pμ]=iPμ,[Kμ,Pν]=2i(ημνDMμν),[Kμ,Mνρ]=i(ημνKρημρKν),[Pρ,Mμν]=i(ηρμPνηρνPμ),[Mμν,Mρσ]=i(ηνρMμσ+ημσMνρημρMνσηνσMμρ),

other commutators vanish. Here ημν is the Minkowski metric tensor.

Additionally, D is a scalar and Kμ is a covariant vector under the Lorentz transformations.

The special conformal transformations are given byTemplate:Sfn

xμxμaμx212ax+a2x2

where aμ is a parameter describing the transformation. This special conformal transformation can also be written as xμx'μ, where

x'μx2=xμx2aμ,

which shows that it consists of an inversion, followed by a translation, followed by a second inversion.

A coordinate grid prior to a special conformal transformation
The same grid after a special conformal transformation

In two-dimensional spacetime, the transformations of the conformal group are the conformal transformations. There are infinitely many of them.

In more than two dimensions, Euclidean conformal transformations map circles to circles, and hyperspheres to hyperspheres with a straight line considered a degenerate circle and a hyperplane a degenerate hypercircle.

In more than two Lorentzian dimensions, conformal transformations map null rays to null rays and light cones to light cones, with a null hyperplane being a degenerate light cone.

Applications

Conformal field theory

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In relativistic quantum field theories, the possibility of symmetries is strictly restricted by Coleman–Mandula theorem under physically reasonable assumptions. The largest possible global symmetry group of a non-supersymmetric interacting field theory is a direct product of the conformal group with an internal group.[2] Such theories are known as conformal field theories.

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Second-order phase transitions

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One particular application is to critical phenomena in systems with local interactions. FluctuationsTemplate:Clarify in such systems are conformally invariant at the critical point. That allows for classification of universality classes of phase transitions in terms of conformal field theories.

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Conformal invariance is also present in two-dimensional turbulence at high Reynolds number.[3]

High-energy physics

Many theories studied in high-energy physics admit conformal symmetry due to it typically being implied by local scale invariance. A famous example is d=4, N=4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory due its relevance for AdS/CFT correspondence. Also, the worldsheet in string theory is described by a two-dimensional conformal field theory coupled to two-dimensional gravity.

Mathematical proofs of conformal invariance in lattice models

Physicists have found that many lattice models become conformally invariant in the critical limit. However, mathematical proofs of these results have only appeared much later, and only in some cases.

In 2010, the mathematician Stanislav Smirnov was awarded the Fields medal "for the proof of conformal invariance of percolation and the planar Ising model in statistical physics".[4]

In 2020, the mathematician Hugo Duminil-Copin and his collaborators proved that rotational invariance exists at the boundary between phases in many physical systems.[5][6]

See also

References

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Sources