Helicity basis

In the Standard Model, using quantum field theory it is conventional to use the helicity basis to simplify calculations (of cross sections, for example). In this basis, the spin is quantized along the axis in the direction of motion of the particle.

Spinors

The two-component helicity eigenstates \xi_\lambda satisfy

\sigma \cdot \hat{p} \xi_\lambda(\hat{p})=\lambda \xi_\lambda(\hat{p}) \,
where
\sigma \, are the Pauli matrices,
\hat{p} \, is the direction of the fermion momentum,
\lambda = \pm 1 \, depending on whether spin is pointing in the same direction as \hat{p} \, or opposite.

To say more about the state, \xi_\lambda \, we will use the generic form of fermion four-momentum:

p^\mu= \left(E, |\vec{p}| \sin{\theta} \cos{\phi}, |\vec{p}| \sin{\theta} \sin{\phi}, |\vec{p}| \cos{\theta}  \right) \,

Then one can say the two helicity eigenstates are

\xi_{+1}(\vec{p}) 
= \frac{1}{\sqrt{2 |\vec{p}|(|\vec{p}| + p_z)}} 
\begin{pmatrix}
|\vec{p}|+p_z\\
p_x+i p_y
\end{pmatrix} 
= 
\begin{pmatrix}
\cos{\frac{\theta}{2}}\\
e^{i\phi}\sin{\frac{\theta}{2}}
\end{pmatrix}\,

and

\xi_{-1}(\vec{p}) 
= \frac{1}{\sqrt{2 |\vec{p}|(|\vec{p}| + p_z)}} 
\begin{pmatrix}
-p_x+i p_y\\
|\vec{p}|+p_z
\end{pmatrix} 
= 
\begin{pmatrix}
-e^{-i\phi}\sin{\frac{\theta}{2}}\\
\cos{\frac{\theta}{2}}
\end{pmatrix}\,

These can be simplified by defining the z-axis such that the momentum direction is either parallel or anti-parallel, or rather:

\hat{z} = \pm \hat{p} \,.

In this situation the helicity eigenstates are for when the particle momentum is  \hat{p} = + \hat{z} \,

\xi_{+1}(\hat{z}) = \begin{pmatrix}
1\\
0
\end{pmatrix} \, and \xi_{-1}(\hat{z}) = \begin{pmatrix}
0\\
1
\end{pmatrix} \,

for then for when momentum is  \hat{p} = - \hat{z} \,

\xi_{+1}(-\hat{z}) = \begin{pmatrix}
0\\
1
\end{pmatrix} \, and \xi_{-1}(-\hat{z}) = \begin{pmatrix}
-1\\
0
\end{pmatrix} \,

Fermion (spin 1/2) wavefunction

A fermion 4-component wave function, \psi\, may be decomposed into states with definite four-momentum:

\psi(x) = \int{\frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3 \sqrt{2E} } \sum_{\lambda \pm 1}{\left(\hat{a}_p^\lambda u_\lambda(p) e^{-i p \cdot x} + \hat{b}_p^\lambda v_\lambda(p) e^{i p \cdot x} \right)} } \,
where
\hat{a}_p^\lambda \, and \hat{b}_p^\lambda \, are the Creation and annihilation operators, and
 u_\lambda(p) \, and v_\lambda(p) \, are the momentum-space Dirac spinors for a fermion and anti-fermion respectively.

Put it more explicitly, the Dirac spinors in the helicity basis for a fermion is

u_\lambda(p) =  \begin{pmatrix}
u_{-1}\\
u_{+1}
\end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix}
\sqrt{E-\lambda |\vec{p}|} \chi_\lambda(\hat{p}) \\
\sqrt{E+\lambda |\vec{p}|} \chi_\lambda(\hat{p})
\end{pmatrix} \,

and for an anti-fermion,

v_\lambda(p) =  \begin{pmatrix}
v_{+1}\\
v_{-1}
\end{pmatrix} = \begin{pmatrix}
-\lambda \sqrt{E+\lambda |\vec{p}|} \chi_{-\lambda}(\hat{p}) \\
\lambda \sqrt{E-\lambda |\vec{p}|} \chi_{-\lambda}(\hat{p})
\end{pmatrix} \,

Dirac matrices

To use these helicity states, one can use the Weyl (chiral) representation for the Dirac matrices.

Spin-1 wavefunctions

The plane wave expansion is

\psi(x) = \int{\frac{d^3p}{(2\pi)^3 \sqrt{2E} } \sum_{\lambda = 0}^3{\left(\hat{a}_{p,\lambda} \epsilon_\lambda(p) e^{-i p \cdot x} + \hat{a}_{p,\lambda}^{\dagger} \epsilon^*_\lambda(p) e^{i p \cdot x} \right)} } \,.

For a Vector boson with mass 'm' and a four-momentum q^{\mu} = (E, q_x, q_y, q_z) \, the polarization vectors quantized with respect to its momentum direction can be defined as

\epsilon^\mu(q,x) \, = \frac{1}{|\vec{q}| q_T} \left(0,q_x q_z, q_y q_z, -q_T^2 \right) \,
\epsilon^\mu(q,y) \, = \frac{1}{q_T} \left( 0, -q_y, q_x, 0 \right) \,
\epsilon^\mu(q,z) \,  =\frac{E}{m|\vec{q}|} \left(\frac{|\vec{q}|^2}{E}, q_x, q_y, q_z \right) \,
where
q_T = \sqrt{q_x^2 + q_y^2} \, is transverse momentum, and
E = \sqrt{|\vec{q}|^2 + m^2} \, is the energy of the boson.
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