Symmetry group of the space time1 on which QFT is defined is usually required to have a representation on the space of states.
Quantum mechanics is just QFT in one dimensions. The spacetime in this case is the time line R. Fields are X(t), and P(t). Symmetry group is group of translations t→t+b of R. Infinitesimal form of (Hermitian) time translation operator is Hamiltonian H=i∂/∂t. One requires that Hilbert space of states have a representation of this group, which in Heisenberg picture is given as exp(iHt)X(0)exp(−iHt)=X(t),exp(iHt)P(0)exp(−iHt)=P(t)
The case of QFT on Minkowski space is similar. We again require the symmetry group (which is Poincare group in this case) to have a representation on the space of states. In particular for the subgroup of Poincare group generated by four translation operators
P0,P1,P2,P3 we
require
exp(iP0x0)ψ(0)exp(−iP0x0)=ψ(x0,0,0,0)
exp(iP1x1)ψ(0)exp(−iP1x1)=ψ(0,x1,0,0)
exp(iP2x2)ψ(0)exp(−iP2x2)=ψ(0,0,x2,0)
exp(iP3x3)ψ(0)exp(−iP3x3)=ψ(0,0,0,x3)
Since
Pμ's commute with each other these conditions can be collectively written as :
exp(iPx)ψ(0)exp(−iPx)=ψ(x)
where
P=(Pμ),Pμ=ημνPν and
η=diag(1,−1,−1,−1). Sredniki's sign convention is different i think.
- For example if space time is a manifold with metric η then symmetry group is group of transfomations which preserve η.
This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-03-30 13:50 (UTC), posted by SE-user user10001