- Central charge
In
theoretical physics , a central charge is anoperator "Z" that commutes with all the other symmetry operators. The adjective "central" refers to the center of the symmetry group -- thesubgroup of elements that commute with all other elements of the original group -- or to the center of aLie algebra . In some cases, such as two-dimensionalconformal field theory , a central charge may also commute with all of the other operators, including operators which are not symmetry generators.More precisely, the central charge is the charge that corresponds, by
Noether's theorem , to the center of the central extension of the symmetry group.In theories with
supersymmetry , this definition can be generalized to include supergroups andLie superalgebra s. A central charge is any operator which commutes with all the other supersymmetry generators. Theories withextended supersymmetry typically have many operators of this kind. Instring theory , in the first quantized formalism, these operators also have the interpretation ofwinding number s (topological quantum number s) of various strings andbrane s.In
conformal field theory , the central charge is a "c"-number (commutes with every other operator) term that appears in the commutator of two components of thestress energy tensor .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.