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Entanglement Theory Quantum Correlations
Photon topology
arXiv
Authors: Eric Palmerduca, Hong Qin
Year
2023
Paper ID
55601
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
282
Citations
N/A
Abstract
The topology of photons in vacuum is interesting because there are no photons with boldsymbol{k}=0, creating a hole in momentum space. We show that while the set of all photons forms a trivial vector bundle γ over this momentum space, the R- and L-photons form topologically nontrivial subbundles γpm with first Chern numbers mp2. In contrast, γ has no linearly polarized subbundles, and there is no Chern number associated with linear polarizations. It is a known difficulty that the standard version of Wigner's little group method produces singular representations of the Poincaré group for massless particles. By considering representations of the Poincaré group on vector bundles we obtain a version of Wigner's little group method for massless particles which avoids these singularities. We show that any massless bundle representation of the Poincaré group can be canonically decomposed into irreducible bundle representations labeled by helicity, which in turn can be associated to smooth irreducible Hilbert space representations. This proves that the R- and L-photons are globally well-defined as particles and that the photon wave function can be uniquely split into R- and L-components. This formalism offers a method of quantizing the EM field without invoking discontinuous polarization vectors as in the traditional scheme. We also demonstrate that the spin-Chern number of photons is not a purely topological quantity. Lastly, there has been an extended debate on whether photon angular momentum can be split into spin and orbital parts. Our work explains the precise issues that prevent this splitting. Photons do not admit a spin operator; instead, the angular momentum associated with photons' internal degree of freedom is described by a helicity-induced subalgebra corresponding to the translational symmetry of γ.
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- This paper contributes to the Entanglement Theory & Quantum Correlations research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- The topology of photons in vacuum is interesting because there are no photons with boldsymbolk=0, creating a hole in momentum space.
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