In
physics and
mathematics, the 'Poincaré group', named after
Henri Poincaré, is the
group of
isometries of
Minkowski spacetime. It is a 10-dimensional
noncompact Lie group. The
abelian group of
translations is a
normal subgroup while the
Lorentz group is a subgroup, the
stabilizer of a point. That is, the full Poincaré group is the
semidirect product of the translations and the
Lorentz transformations.
Another way of putting it is the Poincaré group is a
group extension of the
Lorentz group by a vector
representation of it.
Its positive energy unitary irreducible
representations are indexed by
mass (nonnegative number) and
spin (
integer or half integer), and are associated with particles in
quantum mechanics.
In accordance with the
Erlangen program, the geometry of Minkowski space is defined by the Poincaré group: Minkowski space is considered as a
homogeneous space for the group.
The 'Poincaré algebra' is the
Lie algebra of the Poincaré group. In component form, the Poincaré algebra is given by the commutation relations:
★
★
★
where
is the
generator of translation,
is the generator of Lorentz transformations and
is the Minkowski metric (see
sign convention).
The Poincaré group is the full symmetry group of any
relativistic field theory. As a result, all
elementary particles fall in representations of this group. These are usually specified by the ''four-momentum'' of each particle (i.e. its mass) and the intrinsic
quantum numbers J
PC, where J is the
spin quantum number, P is the
parity and C is the
charge conjugation quantum number. Many quantum field theories do violate parity and charge conjugation. In those case, we drop the P and the C. Since
CPT is an invariance of every
quantum field theory, a time reversal quantum number could easily be constructed out of those given.
Poincaré symmetry
Poincaré symmetry is the full symmetry of
special relativity and includes
★ '
translations' (ie, displacements) in time and space (these form the
abelian Lie group of translations on space-time)
★ '
rotations' in space (this forms the non-Abelian
Lie group of 3-dimensional rotations)
★ '
boosts', ie, transformations connecting two uniformly moving bodies.
The last two symmetries together make up the '
Lorentz group' (see
Lorentz invariance). These are generators of a
Lie group called the 'Poincaré group' which is a
semi-direct product of the group of translations and the Lorentz group. Things which are invariant under this group are said to have 'Poincaré invariance' or 'relativistic invariance'.
See also
★
Euclidean group
★
Lorentz group
★
Wigner's classification
★
Representation theory of the Poincaré group