REPRESENTATION THEORY
Finally, for ozone, which is angular rather than linear, symmetry does not
place such tight constraints. A dipole-moment component parallel to the axis
BB′(figure 29.1(c)) is possible, since there is no symmetry operation that reverses
the component in that direction and at the same time carries the molecule into
an indistinguishable copy of itself. However, a dipole moment perpendicular to
BB′is not possible, since a rotation ofπaboutBB′would both reverse any
such component and carry the ozone molecule into itself – two contradictory
conclusions unless the component is zero.
In summary, symmetry requirements appear in the form that some or all
components of permanent electric dipoles in molecules are forbidden; they do
not show that the other components do exist, only that they may. The greater
the symmetry of the molecule, the tighter the restrictions on potentially non-zero
components of its dipole moment.
In section 23.11 other, more complicated, physical situations will be analysed
using results derived from representation theory. In anticipation of these results,
and since it may help the reader to understand where the developments in the
next nine sections are leading, we make here a broad, powerful, but rather formal,
statement as follows.
If a physical system is such that after the application of particular rotations or
reflections (or a combination of the two) the final system is indistinguishable from
the original system then its behaviour, and hence the functions that describe its
behaviour, must have the corresponding property of invariance when subjected to
the same rotations and reflections.
29.2 Choosing an appropriate formalism
As mentioned in the introduction to this chapter, the elements of a finite group
Gcan berepresentedby matrices; this is done in the following way. A suitable
column matrixu, known as abasis vector,§is chosen and is written in terms of
its componentsui,thebasis functions,asu=(u 1 u 2 ···un)T.Theuimay be of
a variety of natures, e.g. numbers, coordinates, functions or even a set of labels,
though for any one basis vector they will all be of the same kind.
Once chosen, the basis vector can be used to generate ann-dimensionalrep-
resentationof the group as follows. An elementXof the group is selected and
its effect on each basis functionuiis determined. If the action ofXonu 1 is to
produceu′ 1 , etc. then the set of equations
u′i=Xui (29.1)
§This usage of the termbasis vectoris not exactly the same as that introduced in subsection 8.1.1.