From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics differential geometry, an antifundamental representation of a Lie group is the complex conjugate of the fundamental representation, [1] although the distinction between the fundamental and the antifundamental representation is a matter of convention. However, these two are often non-equivalent, because each of them is a complex representation.

References

  1. ^ Burgess, Cliff; Moore, Guy (2006-12-07), The Standard Model: A Primer, Cambridge University Press, p. 492, ISBN  9781139460460.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In mathematics differential geometry, an antifundamental representation of a Lie group is the complex conjugate of the fundamental representation, [1] although the distinction between the fundamental and the antifundamental representation is a matter of convention. However, these two are often non-equivalent, because each of them is a complex representation.

References

  1. ^ Burgess, Cliff; Moore, Guy (2006-12-07), The Standard Model: A Primer, Cambridge University Press, p. 492, ISBN  9781139460460.



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