Fermionic continuous spin gauge field in (A)dS space
read the original abstract
Fermionic continuous spin field propagating in (A)dS space-time is studied. Gauge invariant Lagrangian formulation for such fermionic field is developed. Lagrangian of the fermionic continuous spin field is constructed in terms of triple gamma-traceless tensor-spinor Dirac fields, while gauge symmetries are realized by using gamma-traceless gauge transformation parameters. It is demonstrated that partition function of fermionic continuous spin field is equal to one. Modified de Donder gauge condition that considerably simplifies analysis of equations of motion is found. Decoupling limits leading to arbitrary spin massless, partial-massless, and massive fermionic fields are studied.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 5 Pith papers
-
BRST-BV approach to fields in Poincare patch of AdS
A general BRST-BV Lagrangian for arbitrary-spin free fields in AdS is constructed by reducing the problem to solving algebraic defining equations for spin operators.
-
Spinor-helicity formalism for continuous-spin particles
A new single two-component spinor formulation for continuous-spin particles allows straightforward amplitudes, shows infinite-spin limit of massive amplitudes with exponentiation, and yields nontrivial collinear ampli...
-
Wigner continuous-spin equations in $\mathbf{AdS_D}$: bosonic and fermionic cases
Construction of first-class constraint systems for bosonic and fermionic continuous-spin fields in AdS_D that realize the so(2,D-1) algebra via Lie-Lorentz derivative and match Metsaev's Casimir classification.
-
Light-cone vector superspace and continuous-spin field in AdS
Light-cone vector superspace yields simple spin operators for continuous-spin fields in AdS, enables classification of bosonic and fermionic cases in 4D, and produces all unitary irreps of the non-linear spin algebra.
-
De Sitter Representations
Review of so(1,D) representations for de Sitter space across all D, covering mixed symmetry and fermions, connected to propagating fields.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.