Note that there are two different conventions as to how the Laplace operator is defined: the "analytic" Laplacian, which could be characterized in as (which is negative-definite, in the sense that for any smoothcompactly supported function which is not identically zero), and the "geometric", positive-definite Laplacian defined by .
W.R. Hamilton defined "the square root of the Laplacian" in 1847[1] in his series of articles about quaternions:
<...> if we
introduce a new characteristic of operation, , defined with relation to these three symbols
and to the known operation of partial differentiation, performed with respect to three
independent but real variables as follows:
this new characteristicwill have the negative of its symbolic square expressed by the following formula :
of which it is clear that the applications to analytical physics must be extensive in a high degree.
Consider a simple bundle of notable importance in physics: the configuration space of a particle with spin 1/2 confined to a plane, which is also the base manifold. It is represented by a wavefunction ψ : R2 → C2
where x and y are the usual coordinate functions on R2. χ specifies the probability amplitude for the particle to be in the spin-up state, and similarly for η. The so-called spin-Dirac operator can then be written
where σi are the Pauli matrices. Note that the anticommutation relations for the Pauli matrices make the proof of the above defining property trivial. Those relations define the notion of a Clifford algebra.
Solutions to the Dirac equation for spinor fields are often called harmonic spinors.[3]
where are the off-diagonal Dirac matrices, with and the remaining constants are the speed of light, being the Planck constant, and the mass of a fermion (for example, an electron). It acts on a four-component wave function , the Sobolev space of smooth, square-integrable functions. It can be extended to a self-adjoint operator on that domain. The square, in this case, is not the Laplacian, but instead (after setting )
For a spin manifold, M, the Atiyah–Singer–Dirac operator is locally defined as follows: For x ∈ M and e1(x), ..., ej(x) a local orthonormal basis for the tangent space of M at x, the Atiyah–Singer–Dirac operator is
Then we can define a Dirac-Kähler operator[5][6][7], as follows
.
The operator acts on sections of Clifford bundle in general, and it can be restricted to spinor bundle, an ideal of Clifford bundle, only if the projection operator on the ideal is parallel.[5][6][7]
In Clifford analysis, the operator D : C∞(Rk ⊗ Rn, S) → C∞(Rk ⊗ Rn, Ck ⊗ S) acting on spinor valued functions defined by
is sometimes called Dirac operator in k Clifford variables. In the notation, S is the space of spinors, are n-dimensional variables and is the Dirac operator in the i-th variable. This is a common generalization of the Dirac operator (k = 1) and the Dolbeault operator (n = 2, k arbitrary). It is an invariant differential operator, invariant under the action of the group SL(k) × Spin(n). The resolution of D is known only in some special cases.
^ abHamilton, William Rowan (1847). "On quaternions; or on a new system of imaginaries in Algebra". The London, Edinburgh, and Dublin Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science. xxxi (208): 278–283. doi:10.1080/14786444708562643.