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First of all, the question is written in section $2)$. Also, I known that the $SU(2)$ group do not appears "alone" in standard model, rather, inside the Glashow-Salam-Weinberg model.

1) Introduction

The heuristic picture of the mathematical structure of standard model (SM) lies on Lie group theory. Moreover, SM is a big gauge theory and therefore uses the technology of fiber bundles.

1.1) Bundles and Gauge theory

  • Given a manifold $\mathcal{M}$ (a spacetime) and a Lie group $G$ (a gauge group), we can readly construct another manifold using lie group a $G$: the principal bundles $P_{G}$.
  • Once you constructed the $P_{G}$, you can stablish Ehresmann connections and therefore the connection $1$-form $A$: the gauge field (in fact the one can put the gauge field in spacetime using the local connection $1$-form $A_{s} = s^{*}A$. The $s$ is precisely a choose of the local gauge).
  • Given the $P_{G}$, the implementation of matter fields $\Phi$ in spacetime (spinors, scalars, vectors and tensors) lies on another bundle called Associated bundle: $A_{P_{G}}$. Its definition is given by the quotient: $$A_{P_{G}} := P_{G} \times_{\rho}V = \frac{P_{G} \times V}{G}, \tag{1}$$ where $\rho$ is the representation map between groups: $\rho: G \to GL(V)$ and $V$ is a vector space. Also, $\Phi$ are sections of $A_{P_{G}}$;
  • Inside $A_{P_{G}}$ the one can define, in a formal way, our beloved gauge covariant derivatives that acts (locally) on a matter field $\Phi$ as: $$D_{\mu}\Phi = \partial_{\mu}\Phi + \rho_{*}(A_{s}(X))\Phi \tag{2}.$$

Where $X$ is a vector field and the map $\rho_{*}$ is the representation map acting on Lie algebra elements that follows the diagram:

With the exponential map, $\mathrm{exp}$, you can "translate" the technology of standard Lie group theory, into lie algebra representations as:

$\require{AMScd}$ \begin{CD} \mathfrak{g}@>{\rho_{*}}>> \hspace{0.4cm}\mathrm{End}(V)\\ @V{\mathrm{exp}}VV @VV{\mathrm{exp}}V\\ G @>{\rho}>> GL(V) \end{CD}

2) My Question

The section $1.1)$ shows mathematical structures that are highly dependent on Lie groups, Lie algebras and its representations. Also, complex representations of $SU(2)$ represent non-relativistic spinors and representations of $SL(2,\mathbb{C})$ represent relativistic spinors $(*)$.

Therefore, my question is: why do we use groups like $SU(2)$ to represent gauge symmetry, instead of groups like $SL(2, \mathbb{C})$?

Another possible way to ask the question:

  1. Knowing the steatment $(*)$, we realize that $SU(2)$ represent non-relativistic fields and $SL(2,\mathbb{C})$ represent relativistic fields. Since the standard model is a relativistic theory shouldn't be better to deal with "things" that represent relativistic behaviour?
Qmechanic
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M.N.Raia
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1 Answers1

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A gauge transformation acts on the wave function and does not transform it in space and time but in an abstract internal space. The corresponding gauge covariant derivative has Lorentz indices that ensure local Lorentz invariance.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauge_covariant_derivative#Gauge_theory