Unifying Gravity and EM

In summary, the conversation discusses a proposal for a unified field theory that combines gravity and electromagnetism into a single rank 1 field. The Lagrange density for this proposal is provided, along with a discussion of how the equations are generated and the physical implications of the theory. The proposal is consistent with both weak and strong field tests of gravity and there are no known physical experiments that contradict it.
  • #456
Generating the gauge-invariant GEM field equations

Hello:

In this post, I will apply similar, but not quite identical, approaches to generating the field equations for the fields E, B, e, and b.

If one hopes to model particles that travel at the speed of light, that requires that the field theory be invariant under a gauge transformation. This is one of those constraints on finding a solution I have heard, I have accepted, and I don't understand as well I should.

In deriving the Maxwell field equations using quaternion operators, the gauge invariance was achieved by noting all the derivatives that make up a gauge are in the first term of [itex]-A \nabla[/itex]. The first term was subtracted away using the time honored quaternion trick subtracting the conjugate, q - q* = vector(q). The identical method was applied to the symmetric fields e and b. If were were to just add these two results together, there would be no link between the two sets of equations.

This time we will not use the trick of subtracting the conjugate, yet no terms with g appear in the final field equations because the g2 terms in one cancel the g2 terms of the other in the scalar. There is a g in the 3-vector, but that is not used for generating the field equations.

Start by taking the derivatives of 4-potentials in two ways. For quaternions written in the Hamilton basis, change the order of the differential operator with the potential, which flips the sign of B. For quaternions written in the Even basis, change which term gets conjugated. Calculate:

[tex]\frac{1}{2}(-(A \nabla)(\nabla A) ~+~ (\nabla^* A2)(\nabla A2^*))[/tex]

[tex]=((-\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t} ~+~ c \nabla . A, -\frac{\partial Ax}{\partial t} ~-~ \nabla \phi ~+~ \nabla X A)(\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t} ~-~ c \nabla . A , \frac{\partial Ax}{\partial t} ~+~ \nabla \phi ~+~ \nabla X A) [/tex]
[tex]~+~ (\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t} - c \nabla . A,\frac{\partial Ax}{\partial t} ~-~ \nabla \phi ~-~ \nabla .X2. A)(\frac{\partial \phi}{\partial t} ~-~ c \nabla . A,-\frac{\partial Ax}{\partial t} ~+~ \nabla \phi ~-~ \nabla .X2. A))[/tex]

[tex]= ((-g, E ~+~ B)(g, -E ~+~ B) ~+~ (g, e ~+~ b)(g, -e ~+~ b))[/tex]

[tex](-g^2 ~+~ E^2 ~-~ B^2 ~+~ g^2 ~-~ e^2 ~+~ b^2, 2 E X B ~-~ e .X2. e ~+~ b .X2. b ~+~ 2 gE ~+~ 2 gb) \quad eq 1[/tex]

The g field is not in the scalar due to a cancelation, but is in the 3-vector. The field equations are generated from the scalar, not the 3-vector, so any choice for the gauge g will not effect the field equations I am about to derive.

The current coupling term is complicated by the need to have spin 1 and spin 2 symmetry in the phase. This was worked out earlier in the thread, and here is the solution:

[tex]-\frac{1}{4}(J A ~+~ (J A)^* ~-~ J^{*1} A^{*2 *3} ~-~ (J^{*1} A^{*2 *3})^*) = ~-\rho \phi ~+~ Jx Ax ~+~ Jy Ay ~+~ Jz Az \quad eq 2[/tex]

Write out the Lagrangian by its components, including the current coupling terms:

[tex]\mathcal{L}_{BEbe} ~=~ -c^2 \frac{\partial \Ay}{\partial z} \frac{\partial Az}{\partial y} ~-~ c^2 \frac{\partial Ax}{\partial y} \frac{\partial Ay}{\partial x} ~-~ c^2 \frac{\partial Ax}{\partial z} \frac{\partial Az}{\partial x}[/tex]
[tex]-c \frac{\partial \phi }{\partial x} \frac{\partial Ax}{\partial t} ~-~ c \frac{\partial \phi }{\partial y} \frac{\partial Ay}{\partial t} ~-~ c \frac{\partial \phi }{\partial z} \frac{\partial Az}{\partial t}[/tex]
[tex]-\rho \phi ~+~ Jx Ax ~+~ Jy Ay ~+~ Jz Az \quad eq 3[/tex]

There are fewer terms than in either the Maxwell Lagrangian or the symmetric field Lagrangian because terms between the two cancel. The fields in the field equations will need to do the same. Calculate the first field equation by taking the derivative of [itex]\mathcal{L}_{BEbe}[/itex] with respect to the 4 derivatives of phi.

[tex]\frac{\partial}{\partial x^{\mu}}\left( \frac{\partial \mathcal{L}_{BEbe}}{ \left( \frac{\partial \phi}{\partial x^{\mu} \right)}} \right) ~=~ -c \frac{\partial ^2 Az}{\partial t\partial z} ~-~ c\frac{\partial ^2 Ay}{\partial t\partial y} ~-~ c\frac{\partial ^2 Ax}{\partial t\partial x}\right) ~-~ \rho[/tex]

[tex]=~ \frac{1}{2}\nabla . (E ~-~ e) ~-~ \rho ~=~ 0 \quad eq 4[/tex]

Nice, the E and e terms work together to isolate the A derivatives. And yet, you can spot Gauss' law for EM where like charges repel. There is a Gauss-like law for like charges that attract. Repeat for the derivative with respect to Ax:

[tex]\frac{\partial}{\partial x^{\mu}} \left( \frac{\partial \mathcal{L}_{BEbe}}{ \left( \frac{\partial Ax}{\partial x^{\mu} \right)}} \right) ~=~ -c^2 \frac{\partial ^2 Az}{\partial x\partial z} ~-~ c^2 \frac{\partial ^2 Ay}{\partial x\partial y} ~-~ c\frac{\partial ^2\phi }{\partial t\partial x}\right) ~+~ Jx ~=~ \frac{1}{2}(-\nabla X B ~-~ \nabla .X2. b ~+~ \frac{\partial(Ex ~+~ ex)}{\partial t}) ~+~ Jx ~=~ 0 \quad eq 5[/tex]

You should be able to spot Ampere's law.

What has been done

There is now a formulation of the GEM proposal that uses quaternions exclusively. The standard quaternion algebra inherited from the nineteenth century needed to be extended in two ways. First the idea of a conjugate (or anti-involutive automorphism in fancy jargon, or thingie that flips the sign of all but one part in simple words) had to be expanded to *1, *2, and *3 to get the phase symmetry right for the current coupling term.

The second advance in quaternion algebra needed is the Even representation of quaternion multiplication. Here the eigenvectors of the representation must be excluded to make the representation an algebraic field. I have consistently said I am more comfortable when I found out someone else has done this before. The multiplication table is known as the Klein four-group. I will have to see if others have noticed what happens when the eigenvectors are excluded.

With these two innovations, the field equations for E, B, e and b have been generated. These field equations are gauge invariant because g may be whatever one chooses since it is canceled out in the process. This is vital since the graviton and proton both travel at the speed of light.

What needs to be done

I need to develop a non-gauge invariant set of field equations for massive particles, where the gauge symmetry is broken by the mass charge. I have something technical to keep me off the streets.

Doug
 
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  • #457
The goal: a 4D wave equation

Hello:

A gauge-free unified field equation has been constructed using quaternion operators (previous post), a very good thing because the particles that mediate gravity and EM travel at the speed of light. The particles that interacted with these mediators of force - massive and possibly electrically charged particles - do not travel at the speed of light, so the gauge symmetry must be broken.

In a standard approach to EM, gauge symmetry is broken with the Higgs mechanism. This is done by postulating that there is a Higgs field everywhere any particle ever goes. The vacuum state is a false vacuum, actually higher than a nearby state that will give particles like quarks mass without breaking the symmetry needed by EM.

False vacuums remind me of false gods, something akin to the aether that had to be everywhere, no place in the Universe could be without. The Universe is a clumpy place, and it would be a magical coincidence if the Higgs field got to every place it needed to in the right density in order to give every particle the same symmetry breaking experience needed so all protons, neutrons, and electrons have the same mass. These are reasonable skeptical objections, but they get no air time today for a good reason: there is no alternative. One choice makes things simple.

A thought experiment may show that mass charge does break electric charge symmetry. You have a pair of electrons sitting 1 cm apart, and you measure how fast they accelerate away from each other, [itex]a_e = F/m_e[/tex]. Repeat the experiment, but for a pair of protons, [itex]a_p = F/m_p[/tex]. Let's say your experimental system is so good you are able to measure the two accelerations to ten significant digits. The value of the two accelerations is identical. This equivalence indicates that electric charge is universal.

Repeat the experiment without changing anything concerning the setup. There are two electrons over here rushing away from each other, two protons doing the same thing. The one difference is the acceleration is now measured to twenty significant digits. Now the two accelerations will not be the same. The reason is the gravitational mass has a trivial effect that will keep the heavier protons from accelerating as fast as the pair of electrons because the protons attract each other gravitationally more than the electrons.

Unlike the standard model + Higgs which characterize inertial mass and ignores gravity, the GEM proposal is about gravity and EM working together ever so lightly. We saw that in post 457, eq 1, where the g2 term contributed from EM canceled with the g2 tossed in by gravity.

This time, I will combine the method used to generate the Maxwell equations (post 438) with its Even quaternion representation clone (post 442). If you look carefully at the two Lagrangians, you would notice all the cross terms are the same, and they all have a minus sign (but don't look too close or you will notice I got the sign of one term wrong). This means if we subtract one from the other, all the mixed terms drop, leaving only 12 squared terms.

When I was using tensors, I found the contraction of the two asymmetric rank 2 tensors, [itex]\nabla_{\mu} A_{\nu} \nabla^{\mu} A^{\nu}[/itex], had these same twelve terms, along with 4 others. The field equations that come out of the asymmetric field strength tensor contraction are drop dead gorgeous (from page 1 of this long thread):

[tex]J_{q}^{\mu}-J_{m}^{\mu}=(\frac{1}{c}\partial^{2}/\partial t^{2}-c\nabla^{2})A^{\mu}[/tex]

Feynman lectures said:
What a beautiful set of equations! They are beautiful, first, because they are nicely separated - with the charge density, goes [itex]\phi[/itex]; with the current, goes A. Furthermore, although the
side looks a little funny - a Laplacian together with a [itex](\partial/\partial t)^2[/itex] - when we unfold it we see...it has a nice symmetry in the x, y, z, t - the [c's are] necessary because, of course, time and space are different; they have different units.​


To get the context correct, Feynman was extolling the virtues of writing the Maxwell equations in the Lorenz gauge. Earlier in this thread we went over how Feynman showed the current coupling term [itex]J^{\mu} A_{\mu}[/itex] has spin 1 symmetry, necessary for EM where like charges attract. I know Feynman did not analyze the spin of [itex](i J^{\mu} i)^* (k(j A_{\mu} j)^* k)^*[/itex]. That has spin 2 symmetry, necessary for gravity where like mass charges attract. That's the strength of this proposal, it keeps getting more subtle.

I think I will stop here tonight and let the goal sink in...

Doug​
 
  • #458
sweetser said:
Hello:

The field equations that come out of the asymmetric field strength tensor contraction are drop dead gorgeous (from page 1 of this long thread):

[tex]J_{q}^{\mu}-J_{m}^{\mu}=(\frac{1}{c}\partial^{2}/\partial t^{2}-c\nabla^{2})A^{\mu}[/tex]


To get the context correct, Feynman was extolling the virtues of writing the Maxwell equations in the Lorenz gauge.
Doug

The problem with this wave equation which gives the currents is that it assigns a mass current to an electromagnetic potential. I doubt many are going to cotten on to this idea.

The electromagnetic and gravity fields have their sources because of their group structure. Electromagnetism is an abelian gauge field [itex]A\wedge A~=~0[/tex] which has the unitary group U(1). The two roots of this group are the real parts of the circle on the Argand plane [itex]C[/itex] of compex numbers. Those are of course the numbers +1 and -1. Gravitation is the Lorentz group which is the hyperbolic group [itex]SO(3,1)[/itex]. This group is similar to [itex]SO(4)~=~SO(2)\times SO(2)[/itex] though the hyperbolic group is noncompact. [itex]SO(3,1)~=~SL(2,C)\times Z_2[/itex] and the special linear group is [itex]SU(2)\times SU(1,1)[/itex]. These two parts define the set of three rotations and three boosts which give the six generators of the Lorentz group.

Compact groups have nice properties that a set of transformations of the group generator will converge in a Cauchy sequence. Hyperbolic groups are non-compact and so a sequence is likely to go off to asymptopia and not converge.

If we think of gravity as a gauge-like theory with [itex]F~=~dA~+~A\wedge A[/itex] for nonabelian gauge fields the DE's for these on the classical level are nonlinear. Yet we can quantize these, but renormalization is a bit complicated. We can well enough quantize a SO(4) theory obtained in euclideanization. But gravity is a strangely different. Why? The gauge group SU(1,1) is hyperbolic. In the Pauli matrix representation we have that [itex]\tau_z~=~i\sigma_z[/itex]. So we form a gauge connection

[tex]
A~=~A^{\pm}\sigma_{\pm}~+~iA^3 \sigma_3
[/tex]

and for the group element [itex]g~=~exp(ix\tau_3)[/itex] [tex]=~exp(-x\sigma_3)[/itex] the connection term transforms as

[tex]
A'~=~g^{-1}Ag~+~g^{-1}dg~=~e^{-2x}A^{\pm}\sigma_{\pm}~+~iA^3\sigma_3
[/tex]

and for [itex]x~\rightarrow~\infty[/itex] this gives [itex]A~\rightarrow~iA^3\sigma_3[/itex]. Now [itex]A^{\pm}\sigma_{\pm}[/itex] and [itex]A^3\sigma_3[/itex] have distinct holonomy groups and are thus distinct points (moduli) in the moduli space. But this limit has a curious implication that the field [itex]F~=~dA~+~A\wedge A[/itex] for these two are the same and the moduli are not separable. In other words the moduli space for gravity is not Hausdorff. This is the most serious problem for quantum gravity.

Because of this it is not possible to construct the connection coefficient for gravitation from an internal gauge connection that is the generator of a compact group. The basic point set topologies for the two are different. The point set topology for gravitation is the Zariski topology, and defines certain algebraic varieties and a sheaf bundle system that is fundamentally different from the more trivial principal bundle system for the unitary U(1) group of electromagnetism. Penrose's twistor theory exploits this property and in some ways is a fairly honest approach to quantum gravity, even if it has not proven to be terribly workable in more recent time.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #459
The Dihedral group

Hello Lawrence:

Lawrence B. Cronwell said:
The problem with this wave equation which gives the currents is that it assigns a mass current to an electromagnetic potential. I doubt many are going to cotten on to this idea.

Yeah, people will probably quickly jump to the wrong conclusion. I cannot stop that, nor do I care about such a null reaction.

If you want to look at the group theory behind the GEM proposal, you must look at the Lagrange density, not the field equations. The field equations don't say a word about the spin symmetries, or the symmetries of the field strength tensor, for Maxwell or GEM.

You fortunately are smarter than that, and discuse F. That is in the GEM proposal as [itex]- A \nabla + (A \nabla)^* = (0, E + B)=F[/itex]. The way we write these - you preferring differential geometry, I choosing to work with quaternions - does not have an impact on group theory: it is the unitary group U(1) as it must be to characterize electromagnetism.

The problem as you note is gravity. We agree on that. You then discuss what the group for gravity is, which is kind of surprizing since we don't have a quantum gravity theory yet. How we know what the group theory for the theory we don't have is beyond me. You do know the limitations of current efforts to apply group theory to the problem of gravity. That was a fun challenge to read.

It would appear like you missed a comment made in post #457 about group theory. There I noted that I am using Klein four group, [itex]Z_2~X~Z_2[/itex], also known as the dihedral group, [itex]Dih_2[/itex]. Since the group is finite, it is compact, a good thing as you have pointed out. This avoids the problem you cited about hyperbolic groups. My proposal is a linear theory for gravity because the spin-coupling is between 2 4-vectors, just like in EM. It is far better to quantize a linear theory than a nonlinear one!

If the technically skilled take a brief glance at my proposal and assume I only use U(1), I can wait for the more reflective to think about the advantages and challenges of using [itex]Z_2~X~Z_2[/itex] for gravity and U(1) for EM.

Doug
 
  • #460
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

It would appear like you missed a comment made in post #457 about group theory. There I noted that I am using Klein four group, [itex]Z_2~X~Z_2[/itex], also known as the dihedral group, [itex]Dih_2[/itex]. Since the group is finite, it is compact, a good thing as you have pointed out. This avoids the problem you cited about hyperbolic groups. My proposal is a linear theory for gravity because the spin-coupling is between 2 4-vectors, just like in EM. It is far better to quantize a linear theory than a nonlinear one!

If the technically skilled take a brief glance at my proposal and assume I only use U(1), I can wait for the more reflective to think about the advantages and challenges of using [itex]Z_2~X~Z_2[/itex] for gravity and U(1) for EM.

Doug

A dihedral group, or any polytope is a Coxeter-Weyl A-D-E system define a system of roots. These are the discrete symmetries for the bundle framing of a system. The continuous symmetry are the group generators.

I have not looked at your reference, but the relationship between cyclic groups such as Z_n are

[tex]
D_n~=~\{(x_1,~\dots,~x_n)~\in~Z_n: \sum_{i=1}^n x_i = 2Z (even)\}
[/tex]

which puts constraints on the [itex]D_n[/itex] group that can be used for Voronoi cell "glue vectors." But at any rate the simple cyclic group [itex]Z_2[/itex] corresponds to the [itex]}D_2~\simeq~SO(4)[/itex] or the Lorentzian version [itex]SO(3,1)[/itex]. Each of the [itex]x_i[/itex] corresponds to the rotations in an SU(2). The product of these would correspond to a tetrad where one group is for local transformations of affine connections on the base manifold and the other would correspond to an internal bundle.

I could go on a whole lot more about this and how it leads to [itex]D_4~=~SO(8)[/itex] and how SO(7,1) and how the [itex]spin(6)~\rightarrow~spin(4,2)[/itex] embedded in [itex]SO(7,1)[/itex] is the group for conformal gravity. This group has the cyclotomic ring defined by the Galois field [itex]GF(4)[/itex]. The Galois field is [itex]GF(4)~=~(0,~1,~z,~z^2)[/itex] with [itex]z~=~{1\over 2}(i\sqrt{3}~-~1)[/itex] with [itex]z^2~=~z^*[/itex]. [itex]GF(4)[/itex] is the Dynkin diagram for the Lie Algebra [itex]D_4~=~spin(8)[/itex]. The properties of the basis elements that produce a commutator are

[tex]
z^2~=~z~+~I,~z^3~=~I,~{\bar z}~=~z^2,
[/tex]

and defines the hexcode system [itex]C_6[/itex]

None of this gets away from the problem that the holonomy groups for the Euclideanized versions of groups do not contain those in the Lorentzian or hyperbolic case. The Berger classification of groups according to their holonomy groups for loop variables of affine variables does not cover groups of the sort [itex]SO(n)\times SL(2,C)[/itex]. This is in spite of the fact that [itex]SL(2,C)~=~SU(2)\times SU(1,1)[/itex] and both SU(2) and S(1,1) have the same Dynkin root system.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #461
The dihedral division algebra

Hello Lawrence:

I am trying to decipher what is good or bad about the specific proposal in this thread. A gentle reader would need a good graduate level class on group theory to appreciate all the relationships you have pointed out. For those readers of this thread further behind than myself, I will point out a few things I have learned so far.

The Klein four-group is abelian, so two elements in the group commute. That is consistent with my definition of the Even representation of quaternion multiplication.

The Klein four-group can be viewed as a subgroup of [itex]A_4[/itex]. It does not have a simple graph. Instead the graph has 4 vertices, where only two of them are connected:

.-.
. .

where the dots are the vertices, the dash a connecting edge.

Since I came to this group from a quaternion, it was interesting to read this on wikipedia:

[PLAIN said:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klein_four-group]The[/PLAIN] Klein four-group is the group of components of the group of units of the topological ring of split-complex numbers.

Quaternions in the usual Hamilton representation are 3 complex numbers that share the same real. In the Even representation, the complex numbers are split. Nice.

A cyclic graph is created by taking powers of the group to the n. The graph for the Dih2 has the identity element in the middle, connected to the three other elements of the group. For the chemists in the audience, it looks like an amino group.

Another element of this puzzle are the finite fields or Galois fields. A way to represent the Klein group is as the set of four elements, {1, 3, 5, 7} modulo 8. So 1*3=3, 3*7 Mod 8=5, 5*7 Mod 8 = 3. The representation is Abelian, since 3*5 = 5*3. The Klein group is isomorphic to GF(4) because there are 4 prime numbers in the representation shown.

So far so good.

One way in which the Even representation of quaternions is different from the Klein group is that the group is modulo the eigen vectors of the 4x4 real matrix representation. This is necessary so that the group is a division algebra, a subject I did not come across in my readings on the topic. The moding out of the eigen vectors might have big implications, because then from one element of the group, there would necessarily be a way to get to any other element. This implies that the graph for Dih2 Mod (eigen vectors) is simply connected.

Now we come to the objection:

Lawrence B. Crowell said:
None of this gets away from the problem that the holonomy groups for the Euclideanized versions of groups do not contain those in the Lorentzian or hyperbolic case.

The gentle reader might wonder what a holonomy group is, having never read about it in the funny pages. This is a topic that is central to differential geometry. It is about the relationship between the connection and the manifold. If one moves around the manifold, and does not quite get back to where one started, that is the subject of this topic.

I can now appreciate the problem at hand. If the graph for a group is not simply connected, then one cannot represent the Lorentz group - a picture of flat spacetime - or the small deviations from the Lorentz group needed for gravity to be a dynamic metric theory. If the GEM proposal used the group Dih2 for gravity, it is reasonable to say it could not represent gravity as a smooth metric theory. Although not sure how to write this, I am using a different group, Dih2 Mod (eigen vectors). One can travel anywhere on the manifold with the connection, a necessary thing. At this time, I don't know the impact on parallel transport.

Doug
 
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  • #462
Doug,

For some reason it took a long time to get on here, so I don't have much time. I have a Schubertiade to atttend to. The Wiki-p page indicates what I said. This is involved with D_2, or its roots. These structures are useful in deriving group structures, and I am actively involved with work along these lines, though more up the ladded to Leecha lattices, Conway groups and up to the Fischer-Griess "monster." Yet at the end this does not directly address the issue of non-compact group structure and holonomies. There is in my thinking a system of projective varieties over these in the form of quantum codes, which give light cone structure. Penrose's twistors are related to this type of structure.

Anyway, I will try to address more directly what it is that you say above later this weekend.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #463
Graphs of quaternion represetations

Hello:

In this post I will propose what graphs describe the Even and Hamilton representations of quaternions.

A graph has a number of vertices and then edges which are made of pairs of vertices. The Hamilton and Even representations both have the same 4 vertices: (e, i, j, k). To keep this possibly related to physics, I like to think that in flat spacetime, the absolute value of each of these is equal to 1, but in the curved spacetime of GEM theory, the absolute value of e is the inverse of the absolute value of i, j, and k.

For the Even representation of quaternions, all the vertices are connected to each other. The graph looks like a box with an X:

.-.
|X|
._.

vertices: (e, i, j, k)
edges: ((e, i), (e, j), (e, k), (i, j), (i, k), (j, k)
name: K4:6

This is known as a complete graph because every pair of distinct vertices is connected to an edge.

Here was a bit of fun I had mixing my physics in with pure math. I was thinking about the labels for the edges. For the edge (e, i), I thought I would just use i, similarly for j and k. For the edges connect two 3-vectors, it would be the third 3-vector. The problem is that no labels use e. That didn't sound good to me, ignoring e. What if I labeled each edge as i/e, j/e, or k/e? The physics of GEM suggest the absolute value of this will be one in curved or flat spacetime, so the edge is invariant. Nice. If one is at a vertex and wants to get to another vertex, read the label, and form the product, such as e (j/e) = j.

What about the Hamilton representation of quaternions? We still have four vertices. The part of the graph that connects with e is exactly the same. What changes are the edges that connect the 3-vectors. Because the 3-vectors do not commute, the edges must be directional. The edge that connects i to j has a label of -k/e because -i k/e = j. The directional edge from j to i has the label k/e. Here is the graph for the Hamilton representation of quaternions:

.=.
|X()
._.
vertices: (e, i, j, k)
edges: ((e, i), (e, j), (e, k))
directed edges: ((i, j), (j, i), (i, k), (k, i), (j, k), (k, j))
name: K4:9 ?
Note: the \ of the X should be two directed lines, the limitations of ASCII graphs.

I am not certain if the K classification allows for including directed edges. It is significant that the graphs for the Hamilton and Even representations of quaternions are not the same. Gravity is not the same as EM, in fact, gravity is a little bit simpler (one charge, only attracts), and it is gratifying that the graph for the Even representation is a little simpler than that for the Hamilton representation.

This was a lot of fun, I hope you enjoyed. I have never applied graph theory to anything before in my life.

Doug
 
  • #464
This is in part a test. I am having trouble getting a post sent here.
 
  • #465
What about the Hamilton representation of quaternions? We still have four vertices. The part of the graph that connects with e is exactly the same. What changes are the edges that connect the 3-vectors. Because the 3-vectors do not commute, the edges must be directional. The edge that connects i to j has a label of -k/e because -i k/e = j. The directional edge from j to i has the label k/e. Here is the graph for the Hamilton representation of quaternions:

.=.
|X()
._.
vertices: (e, i, j, k)
edges: ((e, i), (e, j), (e, k))
directed edges: ((i, j), (j, i), (i, k), (k, i), (j, k), (k, j))
name: K4:9 ?
Note: the \ of the X should be two directed lines, the limitations of ASCII graphs.


Doug[/QUOTE]

It is best to go all the way and consider the 120 icosian of quaterions, and its extension to the 240 cell with the 128 elements which give the 240 roots plus the 8 Cartan center elements.

The basic group system for gauge theory is the heterotic group [itex]E_8[/itex], which is one of the Heterotic groups. There has been a lot of activity with this, and the Vogan DeCloux group found its system of root representations and possible impacts on elementary particles and gravitation. There is also a business called supersymmetry, which has 2^{N} elements in its representation. For something called N = 8 this has 256 elements. There is then the Clifford algebra, noted as [itex]CL(16)~=~CL(8)\times CL(8)[/itex] which gives a relationship between these 256 elements and the 240 roots of [itex]E_8[/itex] and its 8 weights (weights are the Cartan centers or eigen-matrices of the roots). The roots are what define the physical states. Now "half" of this CL(8) is defined by

[tex]
CL(8)~=~1~+~8~+~28~+~56~+~70~+~56~+~28~+~8~+~1
[/tex]


for spins 2, 3/2, 1, 1/2, 0, -1/2, -1, -3/2, -2. The 248-dim Lie algebra [itex]E_8[/itex] = 120-dim adjoint [itex]Spin(16)[/itex] + 128-dim half-spinor [itex]spin(16)[/itex] is rank 8, and has 240 root vectors that form the vertices of an 8-dim polytope called the Grosset polytope.

Now the Clifford basis decomposition of the 256 there are the following elements

[tex]
CL(8)~=~1~+~8~+~(24+*4*)~+~(24+4+28)~+~(32+3+3+32)~+~(28+4+24)~+~ (24+*4*)~+~8~+~1,
[/tex]

The * * eclosed give the 4+4 = 8 that corresponds to the 8 [itex]E_8[/itex] Cartan subalgebra elements that are not represented by root vectors (they are the eigen-matrices), and the black non-underlined 1+3+3+1 = 8 correspond to the 8 elements of 256-dim Cl(8) that do not directly correspond elements of 248-dim [itex]E8[/itex]. Now for the spins [itex]\pm 1/2[/itex] there is a 24 = 8 + 8 + 8, which are the three generations of fermions. These are the long roots associated with the 24, which corresponds to the elements of gauge fields which are the SU(3)xSU(2)xU(1) of the standard model. Now the 8 + 8 + 8 are the short roots which complement the roots of the SU(3), and define a triality condition on the fermionic sector.

This triality condition appears to be a very central aspect of group theory and irreducible representations (ir-rep). I have been doing some calculations on a three fold structure with mutually unbiased bases on Jordan algebras (an ir-rep of E_8 elements with octonionic [itex]OP^2[/itex] structure), so that the heterotic E_8 is embeded in a three fold structure within the Leech lattice and a general system of modular forms.

But to bring things to a more common level, the [itex]E_8[/itex] is a rich structure on symmetries with the numbers 2, 3, 5, 8. The two is on the helicity match up above, the 3 is on the triality condition of subgroup ir-reps, the 5 is a symmetry on an icosahedral system "dual" to the triality symmetry, and the 8 the whole system. This naturally embeds in a further three fold system called the Steiner system with the [5, 8, 24] structure for a "code." So the reason there are three families of quarks, three families of leptons (8 + 8 + 8) etc is due to this rich algebraic structure.

Why there are four forces is again an aspect of group decomposition. The Cartan center for the [itex]E_8[/itex] is related to the other heterotic groups [itex]G_2,~F_4,~E_6~ and~ E_7[/itex]. A basic representation is [itex]F_4~=~C_{E_8}(G_2)[/itex] (the Cartan center weighted on [itex]G_2[/itex]), where [itex]G_2~=~SU(3)~+~3~+~{\bar 3}~+~1[/itex], which gives the nuclear force plus a hypercharge "1". The [itex]F_4[/itex] is a [itex]D_4[/itex] group [itex]\sim~SO(7,1)[/itex] which embeds gravity and the weak interactions plus the 8 + 8 + 8.

Yet this structure operates equally for Euclidean and Lorentzian signatures. There is a loss of information, which is being glossed over. This does not solve the problem of ambiguities in holonomic structure for non-compact groups. In quantum field theory it is a common practice to Euclideanize time by letting time go to [itex]t~\rightarrow it[/itex]. This time turns out to be related to temperature by

[tex]
t~=~\frac{\hbar}{kT}
[/tex]

This time is not exactly the same as the Lorentzian time, what we measure on a clock (or might we say what a clock “produces”), but is really a measure of the time where quantum fluctuations may be observed. Sometimes the term quantum fluctuations causes trouble, so it really is more the distance in a Euclidean 4-dim space where an instanton (a tunnelling state etc) with a certain magnitude can appear. As this temperature becomes very small the fluctuation time becomes large and the strength of the fluctuation, if we qualitatively invoke the Heisenberg uncertainty principle

and consider this instanton time t as this uncertainty in time. As the temperature heats up it also means that the fluctuation is stronger or its coupling is made larger and a phase transition will ensue.

This gets into some fascinating stuff! The Lorentzian time implies that the moduli space is not separable. Two moduli, points in the space of “gauge equivalent connections,” are not separable in a Hausdorff point-set topological definition. The topology is Zariski. I can go write more about this if needed, but this gets us into some rather serious stuff. So there is the Lorentzian time and there is this Euclidean time and there is a Wick rotational map between the two. So distinct fluctuation in the Euclidean case which have moduli that are Hausdorff, separable and “nice” correspond to a set of moduli in the Lorentzian case which are not. Physically this means there is some scale invariant physics (again to go into would require a bit of writing work) of phase transitions associated with the correspondence between fluctuations at various pseudo-time scales (or temperatures) and their Lorentzian versions.

This correspondence and the phase transition is a quantum critical point, which have been observed with High temp superconductors and in the physics of Landau electron fluids in metallic crystals in the actinide plus transition range. This also shares some aspects of physics with the Hagedorn temperature of strings.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #466
Not a Clifford algebra

Hello Lawrence:

Thanks for all the information on the group E8, the largest exceptional Lie group. Garrett Lisi made international news back in November for a unification proposal that used E8 without resorting to strings.

Unfortunately, I am not able to implement your suggestion. A brief description of icosian make it clear one is dealing with "a non-commutative algebraic structure". That does work of the Hamilton representation of a quaternion. I am using the word quaternion to mean a 4D division algebra. Many people work productively with the assumption that the only implementation of a 4D division algebra is the one Hamilton developed so many years ago (Gauss got there first by the way).

In this thread, I found it necessary to formulate a new representation of a 4D division algebra where the elements commute. To make the Hamilton representation a mathematical field, one only needs to exclude the additive inverse 0 from the quaternions. For the Even representation, there are more quaternions that need to be excluded (0 and the eigen vectors) but it can be done.

The Even representation of quaternions is not a Clifford algebra. Clifford algebras have orthogonal basis vectors, [itex]e_i e_j = -e_j e_i[/itex]. For the Even representation, [itex]e_i e_j = e_j e_i[/itex]. Oops. I am going to go to the 8th International Conference on Clifford Algebras and their Applications to Mathematical Physics at the end of May in Brazil, and claim the generalization of quaternions that Clifford Algebras represent is not enough to unify gravity and light (that will not go over well!).

Let's think about the two graphs again, something I have done all weekend with great amusement. My central thesis is that we have yet to do the math of 4D like Nature practices it. In the graph for the Hamilton and Even representations, both have 4 vertices. Sometimes I think of them as events - a t, x, y, and z - but even better might be a difference between two events - a dt, dx/c, dy/c, dz/c. Recall the labels I used, which with this application would be dx/dt c, or [itex]\beta_x[/itex].

The Even and Hamilton representations also share three edges, those for (e, i), (e, j), and (e, k). These seven shared elements indicate an overlap between the two representations. So how are they different? When one wants to connect two vertices that are in the 3-vector, there are two choices: use and edge or a directed edge. The Even representation uses an edge, .-., while the Hamilton representation uses two directed edges, .=. (please imagine arrows on both lines in opposing directions). I got so excited by this simple, direct message, that I designed and made a button with the graph for gravity and light last Saturday night, wearing it to a Boston swing dance. Fresh math! If anyone reading these notes would like a similar button, just email me off this thread with your snail mail address, and I will put one in the mail in a few weeks (I should reward those that are doing the work of trying to follow these nerdly riffs).

doug
sweetser@alum.mit.edu
 
  • #467
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

Thanks for all the information on the group E8, the largest exceptional Lie group. Garrett Lisi made international news back in November for a unification proposal that used E8 without resorting to strings.

It is an framing scheme which puts the particles into the [itex]F_4[/itex] and [itex]G_2 [/itex] exceptional subgroups of the [itex]E_8[/itex]. It is a neat idea in some ways, but there are few ambiguities, in particular how [itex]spin(4,2)[/itex] fits into the scheme. The heterotic string has [itex]E_8\times E_8[/itex] for two chiralities and in this one can supersymmetrize the theory. One does not need to have string theory explicitely in here, but the Jordan subalgebra naturally contains stringy structure, such as the 26-dimensional bosonic string.

sweetser said:
Unfortunately, I am not able to implement your suggestion. A brief description of icosian make it clear one is dealing with "a non-commutative algebraic structure". That does work of the Hamilton representation of a quaternion. I am using the word quaternion to mean a 4D division algebra. Many people work productively with the assumption that the only implementation of a 4D division algebra is the one Hamilton developed so many years ago (Gauss got there first by the way).

The quaternionic division algebra is noncommutative by definition. The wiki-p site just discusses the Hamilton vertex permutation on the icosian. There is a whole lot more structure to this system.

sweetser said:
In this thread, I found it necessary to formulate a new representation of a 4D division algebra where the elements commute. To make the Hamilton representation a mathematical field, one only needs to exclude the additive inverse 0 from the quaternions. For the Even representation, there are more quaternions that need to be excluded (0 and the eigen vectors) but it can be done.

This is a contradition in definition. The Cayley numbers 1, 2, 4, 8 lead to the reals, complexes, quaterions and octonins. Quaternions as a division algebra are noncommutative.

sweetser said:
The Even representation of quaternions is not a Clifford algebra. Clifford algebras have orthogonal basis vectors, [itex]e_i e_j = -e_j e_i[/itex]. For the Even representation, [itex]e_i e_j = e_j e_i[/itex]. Oops. I am going to go to the 8th International Conference on Clifford Algebras and their Applications to Mathematical Physics at the end of May in Brazil, and claim the generalization of quaternions that Clifford Algebras represent is not enough to unify gravity and light (that will not go over well!).

This appears related to a graded structure. The even quaterionic structure involves elements [itex]e_i~=~\xi_a e^a_i[/itex], for [itex]\xi^a[/itex] a Grassmannian element. The quaterions then define supermanifold coordinates with

[tex]
y^i~=~x^i~+~{\bar\theta}\sigma^i\theta.
[/tex]

You will then have [itex]\{e^a_i,~e^b_j\}~=~\eta^{ab}g_{ij}[/itex], which are fermionic correspondences with quaterionic elements. The quaterionic fields are framed within a Clifford basis, such as a connection form

[tex]
{\cal A}~=~A~+~\Gamma\cdot\psi
[/tex]

So that in the case of QCD the SU(3) is combined with the [itex]3~+~\bar 3[/itex] in [itex]G_2[/itex]. Similarly the fields can be again framed with Grassmannian elements.

This will then extend these elements to a graded algebraic correspondence between bosons and fermions. I have had some communciations with Garrett Lisi and others on just this issue of extending the framing system to a graded Lie algebraic structure.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #468
Representation theory

Hello Lawrence:

The question is whether representation theory can play a role in the description of quaternions. As a warmup exercise, let's write out two different representations of what I have been carefully calling the Hamilton representation of quaternions.

[tex]
q1 (t, x, y, z) = \left(\begin{array}{cccc}
t & -x & -y & -z\\
x & t & -z & y\\
y & z & t & -x\\
z & -y & x & t
\end{array}\right)\quad eq 1
[/tex]

[tex]
q2 (t, x, y, z) = \left(\begin{array}{cccc}
t & x & y & z\\
-x & t & z & -y\\
-y & -z & t & x\\
-z & y & x & t
\end{array}\right)\quad eq 2
[/tex]

These two 4x4 real matrix representation of quaternions are not identical. Yet if we look at the multiplication table, they turn out to be the same. We would say the real 4x4 matrix representation q1 is isomorphic to the one for q2. These matrices have addition, subtraction, and multiplication. The one step that requires a light amount of work is to get the inverse and thus show the matrix is always invertible. Turns out that is not the case because there is a division by the norm, t2 + x2 + y2 + z2. If one excludes zero, then division works.

Representation theory does apply to the definition of quaternions. Working exclusively with isomorphic representations can get dull quickly. Let's find a representation that is not isomorphic to eq 1 (and thus eq 2). That would be the Even representation of quaternions, here written in as a 4x4 real matrix:

[tex]
q1 (t, x, y, z) = \left(\begin{array}{cccc}
t & x & y & z\\
x & t & z & y\\
y & z & t & x\\
z & y & x & t
\end{array}\right)\quad eq 3
[/tex]

Again it should be obvious that such a matrix has addition, subtraction, and multiplication well defined for all members. Fire up Mathematica, and you find out, just like eq 1, the matrix is not always invertible. To make it invertible, zero and the eigen vectors of this matrix are omitted.

One of the things that gives me confidence is when I spot errors. This might appear contradictory, but mathematical physics can be so abstract, it can be difficult to spot the right direction. If a question can be asked with enough precision, and shown to be in error, then a correction to the course can be made.

I have said several times that one needs to exclude the Eigen vectors to construct the Even representation of the quaternions. Being self-skeptical, I fired up Mathematica to confirm my statements. Here is the output.

Mathematica said:
The Hamilton representation:

[tex]q1[t_, x_, y_, z_] := \left(
\begin{array}{cccc}
t & -x & -y & -z \\
x & t & -z & y \\
y & z & t & -x \\
z & -y & x & t
\end{array}
\right)\quad eq 4[/tex]

[tex]Simplify[Inverse[q1[t,x,y,z]].\{1,0,0,0\}][/tex]
[tex]\left\{\frac{t}{t^2+x^2+y^2+z^2},[/tex]
[tex]-\frac{x}{t^2+x^2+y^2+z^2},[/tex]
[tex]-\frac{y}{t^2+x^2+y^2+z^2},[/tex]
[tex]-\frac{z}{t^2+x^2+y^2+z^2}\right\} \quad eq 5[/tex]

The Even representation:

[tex]q3[t_, x_, y_, z_] := \left(
\begin{array}{cccc}
t & x & y & z \\
x & t & z & y \\
y & z & t & x \\
z & y & x & t
\end{array}
\right) \quad eq 6[/tex]

Calculate the inverse:

[tex]Factor[Inverse[q3[t,x,y,z]].\{1,0,0,0\}][/tex]
[tex]\left\{\frac{t^3-t x^2-t y^2+2 x y z-t z^2}{(t+x-y-z) (t-x+y-z) (t-x-y+z) (t+x+y+z)},[/tex]
[tex]-\frac{t^2 x-x^3+x y^2-2 t y z+x z^2}{(t+x-y-z) (t-x+y-z) (t-x-y+z) (t+x+y+z)},[/tex]
[tex]-\frac{t^2 y+x^2 y-y^3-2 t x z+y z^2}{(t+x-y-z) (t-x+y-z) (t-x-y+z) (t+x+y+z)},[/tex]
[tex]-\frac{-2 t x y+t^2 z+x^2 z+y^2 z-z^3}{(t+x-y-z) (t-x+y-z) (t-x-y+z) (t+x+y+z)}\right\} \quad eq 7[/tex]

Calculate the Eigenvalues:

[tex]Eigenvalues[q3[t,x,y,z]][/tex]
[tex]\{t+x-y-z,t-x+y-z,t-x-y+z,t+x+y+z\} \quad eq 8[/tex]

The mistake I made was it is the Eigen values that need to be excluded. In the Hamilton representation, the same value of zero must be excluded 4 times. In the Even representation, zero needs to be excluded, along with three other values. That is not too different, but does indicate the representations are not isomorphic.

I have no problem with the statement that quaternions have traditionally been defined exclusively as a 4D division algebra that is noncommutative. I have read that a thousand times. Yet I do research. Sometimes you need to knock heads. I do so using representation theory in this case. That nice every-element-is-positive matrix is 4D in eq 3, can be added to other elements just like itself, can be subtracted from other elements like itself, can be multiplied to create other elements just like it, and should its Eigen values be excluded, can promise that a inverse necessarily exists.

I might be able to decrease conflict by talking about 4D division algebras, one of which happens to be the noncommuting quaternions, the other being a hypercomplex number. I am not a fan of this approach since it does not pay respect to representation theory. There is nothing "hyper" about the matrix in eq 3: all the elements are positive. No wonder it may turn out to be the math behind the one universally attractive force in Nature, gravity.

Doug
 
  • #469
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

The question is whether representation theory can play a role in the description of quaternions. As a warmup exercise, let's write out two different representations of what I have been carefully calling the Hamilton representation of quaternions.

Doug

As this goes on I am beginning to think that you have very different definitions for various things. It is a bit as if you have some alternate mathematics, such as symmetric field tensors and the like.

Of course quaternions or a Clifford basis has a representation. The Dirac matrices are a particular represenation of [itex]Cl(3,1)[/itex] in the [itex](0,~1/2)\oplus (1/2,~0)[/itex] spinor representation of the Lorentz group. It is not too difficult to impose a local representation theory on the Dirac matrices and define connection terms and curvatures for general relativity in a spinorial form. Then the gravity field terms are equivalent to the Clifford spinors, and their product is just a Clifford bispinor.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #470
New meth means new physics

Hello Lawrence:

It certainly is possible that I am misusing standard technical terms. I point out one such error in my last post, where I should have used Eigen value instead of Eigen vector.

It would be a concern to me if as a general practice I was using "very different definitions of various things". This sort of problem does happen for people who do Independent Research. This happens because those independent people are so isolated, they do not learn correct definitions.

In post 469 I talked about three different representations for quaternions. For two of them, I said they were isomorphic representations. In the examples section of http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_representation, they show trivially different matrices that end up having the same multiplication table. If every representation was isomorphic, we would not need the word isomorphic, it would be part of what representation theory means. Representations of groups that are not isomorphic are an important branch of representation theory.

I like this comment:

Lawrence B. Crowell said:
It is a bit as if you have some alternate mathematics, such as symmetric field tensors and the like.

I am a subversive, but I am a bit sensitive to the phrase "alternate mathematics" since it is close to "math that makes no sense". My math is precise enough for Mathematica to understand it, defined in equation 6 of post 469, it found the inverse in equation 7, and the Eigen values in equation 8. One cannot put a vague or BS math into a symbolic math package and have it spit out sensible results.

I have been so precise, so into the standard lexicon of math, that I think I am trying to use the graph K4:6 as the foundation for gravity, and K4:9 for EM.

What you have done consistently is try an throw a noncommuting curveball, and I am not swinging at it. Yes, the Hamilton representation of quaternions - the only ones anyone ever learns - is the Clifford algebra CL(0, 2). That is part of my proposal. Not being a Ph.D., I practice the rare art of intellectual minimalism. I can get by with few things, used creatively.

What was Clifford trying to do? He was trying to generalize quaternions, focusing on that strange animal, the cross product. In my work, one cross product is enough. I don't need many varieties of a cross product. What I need is something that is genuinely different from a cross product, hence the two K4 graphs. I don't need more than 4 dimensions. Actually, I think if a proposal works in 5 or more dimensions, it is wrong on the grounds of dimensional analysis alone. I recognize that people in academia may find such a dismissive stance of all work done on Kaluza-Klien and strings harsh, oh well. If people choose to work with the Riemann curvature tensor, the Ricci tensor, the Ricci scalar, or Einstein's field equations, they may do so to describe gravity. The GEM proposal is dedicated to the idea that work with gravity and the tools of Riemann curvature will continue to fail to connect with quantum mechanics as they have since the 1930s (about the time when people thought GR and quantum mechanics had to be united somehow). CL(0, 2) is enough, 4D is enough, the Christoffel is needed but the Riemann curvature tensor is not. Lucky I am not trying to get a grant.

If by "alternate mathematics" you mean I cannot connect to the vast amount of work done on gravity in the past, I can accept that as a compliment. It is a good sign for originality in an area of study that needs a serious slap in the face.

Doug
 
  • #471
Hi Doug:

The competition has been busy. You really should have a look at this

Gravitomagnetism in teleparallel gravity

E. P. Spaniol, V. C. de Andrade‡
Instituto de Fisica, Universidade de Bralsilia
C. P. 04385, 70.919-970
Brasilia DF, Brazil

arXiv : 0802.2697v1

extract -
In the present work, a dfferent approach will be adopted to reexamine
gravitomagnetism. Due to the fundamental character of the geometric structure
underlying gauge theories, the concept of charges and currents and, in particular, the
concept of energy and momentum are much more transparent when considered from
a gauge point of view. Accordingly, we shall consider gravity to be described
as a gauge theory for the translation group, which gives rise to the so-called
teleparallel equivalent of GR. In this scenario we recover all the aspects predicted by
GR and moreover we have all the formal structure of a gauge theory, which is naturally
close to electromagnetism due to its abelian character. Therefore, the concepts of
gravitoelectric and gravitomagnetic fields emerge, as we will see, in the same way as
in the electromagnetic theory, that is, as components of the field strength of the gauge
theory.
The paper is divided as follows: in section 2 we review the fundamentals of
teleparallel gravity; in section 3 the gravitational Maxwell equations are introduced
in their exact form...

You might even meet these guys on your jaunt.

I'd like to hear what Lawrence B. thinks about Teleparallel gravity. It's very appealing that it's a simple gauge theory.
 
  • #472
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

It certainly is possible that I am misusing standard technical terms. I point out one such error in my last post, where I should have used Eigen value instead of Eigen vector.

It would be a concern to me if as a general practice I was using "very different definitions of various things". This sort of problem does happen for people who do Independent Research. This happens because those independent people are so isolated, they do not learn correct definitions.

---------

If by "alternate mathematics" you mean I cannot connect to the vast amount of work done on gravity in the past, I can accept that as a compliment. It is a good sign for originality in an area of study that needs a serious slap in the face.

Doug

The problem that I have is that some of what you say simply makes little sense to me. The reasons for anti-symmetric field tensors, for instance, are due to some basic results in differential geometry. The reason for some of these structures are mathematically determined by some very well grounded theorems in mathematics. I say this as someone familiar with the theorems of Uhlenbech, Freedman and Donaldson on the differential topology of gauge theory on four manifolds, and the celebrated Atiyah-Singer index theorem which determines the structure of moduli spaces. There is nothing in the mathematical literature which points to anything which you allude to.

There is a reason why people work with dimensions larger than four, or five in the case of the EM Kaluza-Klein theorem. It is likely that the structure of elementary particles is intimately associated with quantum gravity and the structure of the universe. The Maldacena result on the dual isomorphism between the Anti-deSitter spacetime and the conformal structure of field theories is a clear indication that quantum gravity necessitates a unification with gauge field theory and their fermionic sources (quarks, leptons, Higgs, dilatons etc). And as much as you might not like it this gets one into all the complexity of supersymmetry, some stuff with string theory, loop quantum gravity, maybe twistor theory and ... .

My point about nonholonomic loops and noncompactness indicates that I think there is a major physical (and equivalently mathematical) element which is missing from all of physics out there. I am working on a number of possiblities to address this question. I also lean a bit on subjects such as solid state physics, the theory of quantum gases (boson condensates etc) and quantum liquids, quantum phase transitions and so forth. I am primarily interested in approaching this from a physical basis, and exploiting the mathematics to make it work where necessary.

Also, I and anyone can solve equations on MATHEMATICA. However, if those equations are arrived at by wrong mathematics then the solutions don't mean a whole lot, even if done by computer.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #473
Mentz114 said:
Hi Doug:

The competition has been busy. You really should have a look at this

Gravitomagnetism in teleparallel gravity

E. P. Spaniol, V. C. de Andrade‡
Instituto de Fisica, Universidade de Bralsilia
C. P. 04385, 70.919-970
Brasilia DF, Brazil

arXiv : 0802.2697v1

extract -


You might even meet these guys on your jaunt.

I'd like to hear what Lawrence B. thinks about Teleparallel gravity. It's very appealing that it's a simple gauge theory.

This has some interesting prospects. The Finsler geometry can be used to intertwine all possible frames. So potentially in a more general setting, potentially useful for quantum gravity, accelerated frames can be brought into a form of equivalence with inertial frames. Then accelerated frames are in a more general setting a form of comoving frame with an underlying isometry.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #474
Missing elements

Hello Lawrence:

I think we should be able to part on good terms.
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
The problem that I have is that some of what you say simply makes little sense to me. The reasons for anti-symmetric field tensors, for instance, are due to some basic results in differential geometry. The reason for some of these structures are mathematically determined by some very well grounded theorems in mathematics. I say this as someone familiar with the theorems of Uhlenbech, Freedman and Donaldson on the differential topology of gauge theory on four manifolds, and the celebrated Atiyah-Singer index theorem which determines the structure of moduli spaces. There is nothing in the mathematical literature which points to anything which you allude to.

All the physicists eggs are in the anti-symmetric field tensor basket for good technical reasons. It takes an impressive investment to understand the groundwork of differential geometry as you have done.

Important breakthroughs are the sport of the young who have yet to learn the foundations so well. Those youngsters need to be part of a cell that solve enough nagging questions that the establishment has to pay attention.

I am not particularly young, and I do not have a "cell". I am using the Internet to try and construct one via my web assets (this thread on physicsforums.com, quaternions.com, quaternions.sourceforge.net, TheStandUpPhysicist.com, and probably most important, YouTube.com). I can quantify the number of folks which continue to read this thread, and have statistics on my web sites and YouTube (18k downloads).
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
There is a reason why people work with dimensions larger than four, or five in the case of the EM Kaluza-Klein theorem. It is likely that the structure of elementary particles is intimately associated with quantum gravity and the structure of the universe. The Maldacena result on the dual isomorphism between the Anti-deSitter spacetime and the conformal structure of field theories is a clear indication that quantum gravity necessitates a unification with gauge field theory and their fermionic sources (quarks, leptons, Higgs, dilatons etc). And as much as you might not like it this gets one into all the complexity of supersymmetry, some stuff with string theory, loop quantum gravity, maybe twistor theory and ... .

I know researchers are rational. My objection was technical, and it was not addressed. The units for spacetime are wrong. You start off in Mathematica wrong, everything that follows is wrong. You start off wrong in theoretical work, and everything that follows is wrong. Same harsh logic.

My preferences are not going to change the flow of research money or efforts into work on strings or loop quantum gravity. I am not bitter that physics research happens to be going that way. Nature doesn't care if we get the right answer or the wrong one, and neither do I. I have no fear of anyone. I have no problem telling the brightest physicists on the planet that because the units of higher dimensional spacetime are wrong, what they work on is wrong and will not last the test of time. They will go off on a compatification riff which as my mother, God bless her soul, would say is a bunch of crap. They will get funded, go to conferences, talk about the latest new result, but in time, all my chips are bet on the collapse of extra dimensional spacetime work.

People who do work on gravity do not even acknowledge the risk that their work could be wrong. This is purely a technical issue: if gravity gets united with the rank 1 field theory for EM by also being a rank 1 field theory, then every paper that presumes gravity must be rank 2 is wrong.
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
My point about nonholonomic loops and noncompactness indicates that I think there is a major physical (and equivalently mathematical) element which is missing from all of physics out there. I am working on a number of possiblities to address this question. I also lean a bit on subjects such as solid state physics, the theory of quantum gases (boson condensates etc) and quantum liquids, quantum phase transitions and so forth. I am primarily interested in approaching this from a physical basis, and exploiting the mathematics to make it work where necessary.

I wish everyone luck in their research. Your point about both group theory and noncompactness effected me in a good way. I was trying to keep up with all your comments on group theory, and was not satisfied with what I could say about group theory as it applied to GEM. One of the big accomplishments I have had is to visualize the groups SU(2) and SU(3) with animations of quaternions. That work did not link to the discussions on the Hamilton and Even representations of quaternions. I recently got a book, "Quaternions, Clifford Algebras and Relativistic Physics" based on the title alone :-) The author Patrick Girard works within the standard limitations people bring to the topic, not realizing the Maxwell equations can be written with real quaternions as has been done here. On page 4, he wrote out the multiplication of the Klein four-group, and it looked identical to what I had posted here for the Even representation of quaternions. Nice.

So I read more about this group. That eventually led to the graph of the dihedral group:

._.
. .

Although I had a group, it did not look right. We start from a flat metric:

[tex]d \tau^2 = dt^2 - dR^2/c^2[/tex]

Take the Newtonian step away from this flat spacetime:

[tex]d \tau^2 = (1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R}) dt^2 - dR^2/c^2[/tex]

This is Newton's law written as a metric theory. The potential that is consistent with field theory is [itex](1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R})[/itex], not [itex]-\frac{G M}{c^2 R}[/itex] as is often written. Take one more step away to get to the first-order parameterized post Newtonian metric:

[tex]d \tau^2 = (1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2) dt^2 - (1 + 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R}) dR^2/c^2[/tex]

The Schwarzschild metric a solution to the Einstein field equations, or the exponential metric a solution to the GEM field equations, both have the same Taylor series expansion that match these terms. It is the next terms where GR and GEM part ways.

GR:
[tex]d \tau^2 = (1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2 - 3/2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^3) dt^2 - (1 + 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 3/2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2) dR^2/c^2[/tex]

GEM:
[tex]d \tau^2 = (1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2 - 4/3 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^3) dt^2 - (1 + 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2) dt^2) dR^2/c^2[/tex]

At second order parameterized post-Newtonian accuracy, the GEM proposal is a testable hypothesis. Nothing this precise has come out of the vast amount of work done in loop quantum gravity or strings.

So we can see this shift from a flat metric, to Newtonian, to weak field, to strong field, with all four terms gently changing. I felt if my graph was this:

._.
. .

then my proposal about the Even representation of quaternions was wrong. I put that key part of my proposal on the firing line. I felt that graph would never be able to do a smooth transition needed for a metric solution (there is also a potential solution to the GEM field equations, and a metric/potential solution to the GEM field equations, but this is a possibility people trained in GR cannot entertain because there is no potential in the Rienmann curvature tensor, it is exclusively about the metric.)

I read up on graph theory, and realized that the graph that described the Even representation was this one:

._.
|X|
._.

This is both compact and the vertices are all connected to each other. This sort of finite group is compact in the formal sense of the word. It is part of standard math, the group K4:6, but is not part of the literature devoted to gravity. This makes it a candidate for the missing piece of physics.

Lawrence B. Crowell said:
Also, I and anyone can solve equations on MATHEMATICA. However, if those equations are arrived at by wrong mathematics then the solutions don't mean a whole lot, even if done by computer.

I was trying to figure out what I didn't like about this comment. It was not an attack on me, because we both know from experience that processing equations through Mathematica is an acceptable check of form, but like all computer programs, what one puts in is the most important aspect of what comes out. The first line of your reply indicates you don't get where I am going. You know your land well. The best reply I can think of was written by a folk singer:
Bob Dylan said:
Come mothers and fathers
Throughout the land
And don't criticize
What you can't understand
Your sons and your daughters
Are beyond your command
Your old road is
Rapidly agin'.
Please get out of the new one
If you can't lend your hand
For the times they are a-changin'.

If the GEM proposal is correct - or some similar technical variation of a rank 1 field theory to unify gravity and EM - then the work of Uhlenbech, Freedman, Donaldson, Wheeler, Hawking, Feynman, Kaluza, Klein, all string theorist, all loop quantum gravity people, and even the work of Albert on gravity will collapse. I cannot care what your opinion is on that clear yet radical sentence because I know you haven't calculated the Christoffel symbol of the second kind for the Rosen metric, finding some erudite reason to not bother. I am much happier finding wonderful new gems about GEM like the graph theory for the Hamilton and Even representation of quaternions than bonking heads like I have done in this paragraph.

This Mathematica warning is also not germane to the question at hand: can one formulate a 4 dimensional, commuting division algebra? If the answer is yes, that would be interesting because everyone is instructed that the only 4 dimensional division algebra has the property that it is non-commuting. That is math worth talking about, not a banal caution about symbolic math programs.

Just for fun, I will take a different approach on the value of Mathematica. What passes for physics research today is so vague it cannot be translated into a proposal that can be confirmed by machine. A measure of the value of work is the ability to translate it to symbolic code. The Universe is constructed out of parts that do not think, they do. The math used to describe the Universe should be the same way. Sure, the high priests that believe they are above the mundane nuts and bolts of math will look scornfully at such a stance, but that is fine with me. I prefer nuts and bolts, one can build real things with them.

Doug
 
  • #475
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

The Schwarzschild metric a solution to the Einstein field equations, or the exponential metric a solution to the GEM field equations, both have the same Taylor series expansion that match these terms. It is the next terms where GR and GEM part ways.

GR:
[tex]d \tau^2 = (1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2 - 3/2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^3) dt^2 - (1 + 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 3/2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2) dR^2/c^2[/tex]

GEM:
[tex]d \tau^2 = (1 - 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2 - 4/3 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^3) dt^2 - (1 + 2 \frac{G M}{c^2 R} + 2 (\frac{G M}{c^2 R})^2) dt^2) dR^2/c^2[/tex]

At second order parameterized post-Newtonian accuracy, the GEM proposal is a testable hypothesis. Nothing this precise has come out of the vast amount of work done in loop quantum gravity or strings.

Doug

To be honest at this point I think I can rely upon experimental evidence. Last year the motion of two neutron stars was measured and compared to Parameterized Post Newtonian parameters up to [itex]O(1/c^4)[/itex], or ppN in the standard line element parameters with [itex]ds^2[/itex] in units of distance. The motion agreed with Einstein's GR up to one part in [itex]10^7[/itex] in this order. If your equations were correct over those of GR the deviation to this order, which appears as the [itex]O(1/c^6)[/itex] in your proper time, would have been blatantly apparent.

I hate to say but I think your GEM theory, or at least the metric you claim above, has been falsified.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #476
Neutron star data

Hello Lawrence:

If you have a reference for this work, I would appreciate it. I certainly would cite it in discussions of my work.
If your equations were correct over those of GR the deviation to this order, which appears as the O(1/c6) in your proper time, would have been blatantly apparent.

We cannot measure the mass or angular momentum of neutron star number 1 directly, it must be modeled. We cannot measure the mass or angular momentum of neutron star number 2, it too must be modeled. The most we could hope to say is that we can construct a model using the Schwarzschild metric that is consistent with the data we have. I am sure they have done that, which is good news.

I would need to see that they tried to plug in the Rosen or other alternative metrics at the start, which could change the mass and angular momentum descriptions of both neutron stars, and that such a model could not be adjusted to also be consistent with the data they collected. The coefficients of the two metric have the same sign but are 12% different at second order PPN accuracy. There are 4 critical numbers that have to be generated, and that gives one freedom to match a range of alternative metrics. I hope they are not claiming a system with 4 parameters can be used to eliminate alternative metrics.

You, the great skeptic of the value of the Mathematica, I am surprised you would think a system that inherently depends on the construction of two models for two spinning masses would think this data could distinguish alternative metric solutions for gravity. It is vital people do not over-claim what their data shows. They can demonstrate consistency, but I am skeptical about broader claims.

For light bending around the Sun whose mass we know from other effects, doing a measure at second order PPN accuracy is also dependent on models, such as the quadrapole moment of the Sun. That will have an effect in the range of 1 microarcsecond, which is the size of the difference between the Schwarzschild and GEM metrics (10.8 versus 11.5 respectively). The rotation of the Sun also must be accounted for at this level of detail, and that is darn difficult. I would bet the folks with the neutron star data did not put an effort to have a quadrapole moment to each of the stars, yet it would necessarily change the model at the resolution they were investigating.

The only non-model dependent data for higher order effects I know is about gravity waves. The rate of energy loss is consistent with a quadrapole moment. If a system lost energy as a dipole, then the loss would be far greater than what we have seen. This is why the Rosen metric is not a serious competitor. He proposed a fixed background metric as well as a dynamic background metric. An isolated system could store energy in the fixed metric field, which would allow the system to have a dipole moment while still conserving energy. This is why many theories that add on a new field fail: the new field can store energy and allow for dipole emission of gravity waves.

The GEM proposal is simpler than GR in that it uses only one derivative of a connection, not the difference between two derivatives of connections in the Riemann curvature tensor. The lowest order of gravity wave emission will be the water balloon wobble, the quadrapole moment.

If we were to ever measure a gravity wave, there could be a clean way to distinguish GEM from GR. In GR, they copy EM so closely, it is widely claimed that the waves must be transverse. In GEM which has EM integrated, the transverse waves are EM, leaving the longitudinal and scalar modes for gravity. We would need to detect the same gravity wave along 6 axes to to figure out the polarity, but that would be non-model dependent way to confirm or reject the proposal.

I am looking forward to reading the reference. I would not "hate" such a result because I have a professional scientific attitude. I have worked on other research projects that had to be abandon because of the data. The limitations of data must be skeptically assessed. Falsification is tough.

Doug
 
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  • #477
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

If you have a reference for this work, I would appreciate it. I certainly would cite it in discussions of my work.


Doug

Here is an overview of this type of work from the Cliff Will, a war horse on the experimental verification of GR:

http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0709/0709.2589v1.pdf

I tried to look up in APJ or in Science an article which discussed a specific neutron pair system. I'll have to look further. Yet the paper by cliff illustrates aspects of what I said. This paper also illustrates why your objections are not terribly relevant.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #479
CarlB said:
This might be the plae to start looking:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PSR_J0737-3039

The references in the Wiki-p site

http://www.physicsweb.org/articles/world/18/3/6/1
http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/news/doublepulsar/

http://www.atnf.csiro.au/research/highlights/2003/manchester/manchester.html

are of help, in particular the last one. The graph in figure 3 I recall appeared in the journal paper. The paper was in Science or APJ. The case was pretty convinceingly made that this was a verification of GR beyond the Hulst result of the late 1970s.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #480
The Will paper

Hello Lawrence:

The cited paper by Clifford Will is not relevant to your assertion that "at least the metric you claim above, has been falsified". What Will does in that paper is try to connect the post-Newtonian math machinery to what folks do in numerical relativity for the final few cycles of collapse of binary systems. There are so many assumptions that go into those models - big ones like the correct field equations for gravity are the Einstein field equations - that zero of this article has to do with the first seven coefficients of the Taylor series expansion for the metric of gravity. He is playing guessing games with eccentricities and M/R errors.

The paper shows a mathematical consistency between PN approaches and numerical general relativity, one nicer than he expected. A fine result, but not germane.

I have asked Clifford Will questions about the GEM proposal twice. The first time was at an Eastern Gravity Meeting where he gave a keynote address. I asked the first question: when will we get data to second order PPN accuracy? He said he did not know, and did not know of any experiments designed specifically to get that data (that is one reason I was taken aback by you referencing a paper by Will and saying this was relevant to the coefficients). I also asked another question, about the polarization of gravity waves, and in post #477 put his reply into my own words: it may not happen.

Will came to MIT to give a talk. There was a coffee session before, and I was sure to go although I don't drink coffee or tea. He looks like Ted Turner. No one was talking to him, so I went up to him and asked him about his Living Review article on experimental tests of GR. I pointed out that in section three, he went through lots of alternatives to GR. The article was pointed out to me by someone who claimed that of course a rank 1 field theory of gravity would be cited in his exhaustive review, but I said it wasn't there. He confirmed that a rank 1 theory was not there. The reason was that no rank 1 theory had been proposed that would pass all the basic tests, from the equivalence principle, to light bending around the Sun, to the precession of the perihelion of Mercury. He also made clear he would not be able to read my efforts to accomplish these goals.

Because there is a solution to the GEM field equations that can be expressed as a metric, it will pass the tests done of the equivalence principle, where all objects no matter what their composition move according to the metric equation.

The light bending calculation was done for GEM in post #351. Light bends a little more than what is predicted by GR, but the differences is only 9.1% according the the calculation in the post (11.69-10.96/10.96). The fact that light can bend at all in the proposal is why I have discussed the coupling term at length in this thread. One has to show spin 2 symmetry in both the coupling term and the field strength tensor term.

The third test is the precession of the perihelion of Mercury, which I did in post #233. It took me along time to get all the details of that one right, 24 steps in all.

Per Will's request, I have not forwarded my draft paper to him. There is a rank 1 theory involving gravity that meets his basic criteria not referenced in his review.

Doug
 
  • #481
The binary pulsar data

Hello Karl and Lawrence:

Thanks for the references to the double pulsar system. Looks like they expect to get a few more terms. From 2003:
[PLAIN said:
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/research/highlights/2003/manchester/manchester.html]In[/PLAIN] the next few years, we expect to measure several more relativistic effects, some dependent on higher-order terms in the post-Newtonian expansion. These will provide the tightest constraints yet on theories of gravity in the strong-field regime.

From the paper itself in 2006:
In particular, we have measured omega dot so precisely (i.e., to a relative precision approaching 10-5) that we expect corrections at the 2 PN level to be observationally significant within a few years.

That is the level where GR and GEM differ. The error on the 2 PN level would have to be under 10%. Then assumptions put into the models would matter.

I know the gamma is the same for GR and GEM (if I am thinking about the right gamma). I don't know what GEM predicts for omega dot, s or r. More work to be done.

Perhaps my skimming was too quick, but I don't see how this particular binary pulsar rules out the exponential metric at this time. This is better data and is good news, but there is enough data fitting required to cast doubt on the ability to distinguish subtly different metrics.

Doug
 
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  • #482
It says the orbital velocity is about 0.1% of the speed of light, or 1 part in 1000. Second level PN would be 1 part in a million. According to their data, GR restricts the masses of the stars at an accuracy of 1.337+/-0.004 which is fairly inaccurate at around 1 part in 334.

I think your theory's still alive.
 
  • #483
Future data

Hello Carl:

Thanks for confirming my reading, despite spelling your name incorrectly. There are 10 parameters in the first order parameterized post-Newtonian system, with [itex]\gamma=\beta=1[/itex] for GR, and zero for the other 8. Other proposals have non-zero values, and my impression was those sorts of proposals are at risk of being shown to be wrong by data such as this. For the GEM proposal, all ten of these parameters are the same as for GR. The exponential metric is a kissing cousin of the Schwarzschild metric.

The folks doing these observations think they should get to second order PPN accuracy sooner rather than never. It is not clear how they can rule out metrics for fully conservative theories whose coefficients are not significantly different. I will need to watch for further developments in this area.

Doug
 
  • #484
Check this out. (I have no idea if it's accurate.)

OJ 287: New Testing Ground for General Relativity and Beyond
C. Sivaram, March 14, 2008

The supermassive short period black hole binary OJ287 is discussed as a new precision testing ground for general relativity and alternate gravity theories. Like in the case of binary pulsars, the relativistic gravity effects are considerably larger than in the solar system. For instance the observed orbital precession is forty degrees per period. The gravitational radiation energy losses are comparable to typical blazar electromagnetic radiation emission and it is about ten orders larger than that of the binary pulsar with significant orbit shrinking already apparent in the light curves. This already tests Einstein gravity to a few percent for objects at cosmological distances. Constraints on alternate gravity theories as well as possible detection of long term effects of dark matter and dark energy on this system are described.

http://arxiv.org/abs/0803.2077

P.S. I'm getting huge numbers of hits on my various websites the last 6 hours due to interest in the flat space gravitation theory of Lasenby, Doran, and Gull, and the implications this has for Painleve coordinates. Their theory of gravity is identical to GR to all orders. I don't think GR is accurate to all orders; my interest in their theory is cause it's based on Dirac's gamma matrices and fits into elementary particles really well.
 
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  • #485
Unknown metrics for binary pulsars

Hello Carl:

How far can I go with the exponential metric?
Clint Eastwood said:
A man has to know his [metric's] limitations.

When I derived the metric, I assumed the source was static, spherically symmetric, and not rotating. Zero out of three will be right for a binary pulsar. Those sources are dynamic! They are spinning faster than Dorothy Hamill on fast forward. Since the source is binary, the spherical symmetry is out too. I must disqualify the exponential metric from the competition.

It took me several years before I found a derivation of the precession of the perihelion of Mercury that was explicit enough for me to understand with much work (Sean Carroll's notes were my guide). Most people deal with tough issues using a 12 step program, but it took me 24 steps to get to the 42.8"/century. At several important steps, one had to assume that the precession of the perihelion was super tiny. If not, the math becomes a nightmare. The standard derivation of the perihelion shift will go out the window. I have no sense of how to deal with a system with a strong perihelion shift. I recall reading the befuddlement applies to professionals too.

One assumption I am sensitive to is the 'static' assumption. Near a body of mass so dense that [itex]2 GM/c^2 R \approx 1[/itex], that bit of spacetime will be jumping with things moving fast. Long before we reach a singularity, Nature will need to have a metric that has an hbar or time in it. In other words, the exponential metric will not apply in the region that many people have decided to study with the Schwarzschild metric, the proverbial black hole. Long before the singularity, a radically new metric will be needed for gravity sources. If Nature does work with a significantly different metric (one with t or hbar), then no work on black holes to date will survive that switch. Oops, that will not be popular.

Doug
 
  • #486
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

The cited paper by Clifford Will is not relevant to your assertion that "at least the metric you claim above, has been falsified". What Will does in that paper is try to connect the post-Newtonian math machinery to what folks do in numerical relativity for the final few cycles of collapse of binary systems. There are so many assumptions that go into those models - big ones like the correct field equations for gravity are the Einstein field equations - that zero of this article has to do with the first seven coefficients of the Taylor series expansion for the metric of gravity. He is playing guessing games with eccentricities and M/R errors.
Doug

The analysis is essentially the same at any stage in the inspiral. C Will is doing a bit more than playing guessing games.

sweetser said:
The light bending calculation was done for GEM in post #351. Light bends a little more than what is predicted by GR, but the differences is only 9.1% according the the calculation in the post (11.69-10.96/10.96). The fact that light can bend at all in the proposal is why I have discussed the coupling term at length in this thread. One has to show spin 2 symmetry in both the coupling term and the field strength tensor term.

The third test is the precession of the perihelion of Mercury, which I did in post #233. It took me along time to get all the details of that one right, 24 steps in all.

Per Will's request, I have not forwarded my draft paper to him. There is a rank 1 theory involving gravity that meets his basic criteria not referenced in his review.

Doug

C. Will is not interested in testing alternatives to GR. He tends to stick to the basic paradigm of gravity.

It is not possible to argue against on theory on the basis of another theory. Yet your idea of "symmetric" curvature terms or bundles simply does not make much mathematical sense. It is not applicable in Riemannian geometry or any differential geometry. There are graded structures on noncommutative geometries and the like, but this is not what you are advancing.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #487
CarlB said:
Check this out. (I have no idea if it's accurate.)

OJ 287: New Testing Ground for General Relativity and Beyond
C. Sivaram, March 14, 2008

The supermassive short period black hole binary OJ287 is discussed as a new precision testing ground for general relativity and alternate gravity theories. Like in the case of binary pulsars, the relativistic gravity effects are considerably larger than in the solar system. For instance the observed orbital precession is forty degrees per period. The gravitational radiation energy losses are comparable to typical blazar electromagnetic radiation emission and it is about ten orders larger than that of the binary pulsar with significant orbit shrinking already apparent in the light curves. This already tests Einstein gravity to a few percent for objects at cosmological distances. Constraints on alternate gravity theories as well as possible detection of long term effects of dark matter and dark energy on this system are described.

http://arxiv.org/abs/0803.2077

P.S. I'm getting huge numbers of hits on my various websites the last 6 hours due to interest in the flat space gravitation theory of Lasenby, Doran, and Gull, and the implications this has for Painleve coordinates. Their theory of gravity is identical to GR to all orders. I don't think GR is accurate to all orders; my interest in their theory is cause it's based on Dirac's gamma matrices and fits into elementary particles really well.

I wrote five years ago or time back a Found Phys paper on something similar to this.

I have not reread this literature on this matter, which clearly has advanced since last year. Frankly I don't have all the time in the world to check this out. Save it to say for a number of reasons I strongly suspect the GEM hypothesis is incorrect. It does not make much mathematical (differential geometric) sense, and I suspect that this work with orbiting pairs of compact bodies in ever tighter bounded gravitational wells will provide further tests on GR. To be honest as a classical theory I think Einstein's GR is completely spot on.

The deviations in general relativity is likely at orders when scales approach [itex]\sqrt{G\hbar/c^3}[/itex] or the Planck length. There is I think an sort of equivalent breakdown on the cosmological scale. Our first hint of this with the quantum realm is with the Hawking result on black hole radiation. The other is with some curious results with the cosmological constant and the recent discovery of "eternal inflation."

The Hawking-Unruh effect comes about because in curved spacetime a basis of states in one local inertial frame can't be unitarily defined in another frame. So given a fixed spacetime classical background a basis of states in one region are related to a basis of states in another region by a transformation that is not unitary. This is the Bogoliubov transformation. So in a simple quantum model of states in one inertial frame, directed in and out of an event horizon, become mixed when transformed to another frame. So the lowering operator for the ingoing state in one frame becomes mixed with the raising operator for an outgoing state in another frame. This process is due to nonlocal entanglements across event horizons/

With quantum gravity we no longer have a fixed spacetime background. The path integral is a summation over a range of possible metric configurations. We might think of the rapidity or the hyperbolic functions of the Bogoliubov transformations as being elements summed over in the path integral, where each particular one determines a particular "history." So the Bogoliubov algebra is not just a transformation principle for a quantum field theory in a curved spacetime, but represents a particular history in the path integral and the nonunitary equivalence of vacua. Hence a set of Bogoliubov algebras might be thought of as related to a set of all possible holonomies for spacetime configurations, which are the variables for quantum gravity functional. These holonomies are defined on spacetimes with noncompact group structure and there are big issues with the classification of loop group spaces. In particular the Berger classification of such groups determined by affine connections does not entirely operate here. This is related to the problem that there are not general Cauchy sequences which can be constructed for connections on a space with a noncompact group structure. Such a Cauchy sequence involves differences between connections and hence is associated with curvatures. The inability to define such sequences means that there is a loss of information or a breakdown in an isometry between curvatures and the holonomic structure of the space.

So this gets to the question of dark energy and dark matter. A cosmology with a nonzero cosmological constant, or what is likely a parameter set into a constant (or approximately constant) value by the inflaton or dilaton in a [itex]spin(4,2)~\sim~su(2,2)[/itex] model, is one where in general there is no unitarily equivalency between states in all regions of the cosmology. Even if the spatial surface is flat the accelerated expansion of the cosmology means that there is no such equivalency, and this comes about because there is no Killing vector K which when it acts on the energy KE = const. Without a Killing vector of this sort it means there is no isometry in the spacetime which maintains a constant energy on all paths in the cosmology. So the unitarity inequivalence of vacua in the earliest universe, where a vacua of unitary states is defined on a region [itex]>~ L_p[/itex] in a superposition of other such vacua on about the same scale, is frozen into the classical cosmology after inflation. In a more general setting the Coleman-Mandula theorem is then a local principle. This gives the maximal set of symmetries of the S-matrix as the [itex](0,~1/2)\oplus(1/2,~0)[/itex] spinorial Lorentz group for external symmetry, an internal symmetry [itex][A_i,~A_j]~=~c_{ijk}A_k[/itex], and the discrete CPT symmetry. The "maximal" extension on this is called supersymmetry. A cosmology with a non-zero cosmological constant necessarily means this is a local law, it does not apply globally. This is likely a source for what we call dark energy.


Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #488
Big problems with gravity

Hello Lawrence:

In Will's paper, he does not know what the eccentricities are, nor the right M/R, so he is making a sophisticated exploration of the possibilities. Calling it a guessing game was unfair to this work, but was a little verbal flare, nothing more.

Good to see you missed the point. You made the claim that this particular work was relevant to assessing if the exponential metric has been shown experimentally to be in error. Will's work is fine as it stands, but is not relevant to this forum.

You have yet to publicly back off the claim that the exponential metric should be rejected on experimental grounds we have today. Recanting that claim would in no way be a support of the GEM proposal, just a recalibration of what is in the literature. I at least have backed away from a claim that the binary pulsar data is relevant to testing a metric that presume the system is static, spherically symmetric and not rotating.

If someone is confused, it is not possible to unconfuse them. This does not sound like what I am trying to do:
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
Yet your idea of "symmetric" curvature terms or bundles simply does not make much mathematical sense. It is not applicable in Riemannian geometry or any differential geometry. There are graded structures on noncommutative geometries and the like, but this is not what you are advancing.

I can dump whatever I want into a Lagrange density, takes some derivatives, and end up with field equations. I don't know what math label I should use for my work. I was able to explicitly calculate the Maxwell equations in #438. It would be useful to me to know what was wrong with that derivation, since it looked fine on paper and in Mathematica. After completing that calculation, your suggestion was to do the derivation your way. A find suggestion except that I am an independent researcher. A few posts later (#442), I use the same core tools of physics, varying the Lagrangian to generate the field equations for gravity. Your reply to that was the Accelerated change I, II, and III posts. Those posts represent much work, but on a different topic.
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
Save it to say for a number of reasons I strongly suspect the GEM hypothesis is incorrect. It does not make much mathematical (differential geometric) sense, and I suspect that this work with orbiting pairs of compact bodies in ever tighter bounded gravitational wells will provide further tests on GR. To be honest as a classical theory I think Einstein's GR is completely spot on.

You have stuck to this position from day one. I have made claims - which I cannot independently verify - that you have not done calculations with my proposal, the only way any of this work could become interesting, using the common genuine complaint that you are too busy to do by hand #438, #442, #351, #233, or the divergence of the Christoffel symbol of the Rosen metric.

Let's look at the banal defense of the status quo:
To be honest as a classical theory I think Einstein's GR is completely spot on.

Classical theories, such as the Maxwell equation of EM which can also be integrated seamlessly with quantum mechanics, allows one to define energy at a point. That utterly fails for Einstein's GR. Experts in differential geometry claim this bug is a feature. People who know bugs are bugs, and to distrust people claiming bugs are features. Any proposal that can for any point use the Riemann normal coordinates to make the energy of the field zero at that point, means that boat has no bottom, it is sunk before being pushed off the dock. Einstein had the courage to doubt Einstein when he saw a flaw (I believe he was aware of this flaw and took it seriously, but I might be wrong on this historical detail, anyone recall?). It was impressive how often he tried to rebuild the boat for gravity with so many different approaches. Classical GR is broken in how it deals with energy. The flaw can be seen in the Riemann curvature tensor as the difference of two derivatives of the connection. That problem is fixed in GEM which has only one derivative of a connection.
The deviations in general relativity is likely at orders when scales approach ... the Planck length.

This is so standard, and so wrong in my opinion. What did GR do different from Newtonian theory? Very little. It explained the wee bit of error in the precession of the perihelion of Mercury. Light doesn't bend much around the Sun. Newton gets it half right, and GR (as well as GEM) says the wee bending in time is matched by an equally wee bend in space. That took a lot of effort to measure. There are the "deep" ideas of the equivalence of inertial and gravitational mass, which the well-schooled can discuss for hours on end (it cannot be explained to the average person since they are both mass so should be the same). GR clears up a clear technical problem, that gravity must obey the speed of light.

Nothing large fits with GR today. Let's start small. How about the rotation profile of a thin disk galaxy? Nope, doesn't work. How about how galaxies move in clusters? Nope. How about the big bang? Nope, doesn't work if you just crank back the Universe in time. Well, at least we know where we stand today, except that we don't get the acceleration.

I am aware of what the herd thinks: dark matter, dark matter, inflation, and dark energy respectively. We have the impressive standard model of particle physics, which with its great diversity of particles at this time contributes, zero, zero, zero, and zero particles to these hypotheses.

The modus operandi of a math problem is that big things need to get done by things with no properties (other than what is needed to solve the problem). We have problems with thin disks, galaxy clusters, the big bang, and the current state of the Universe. It is my belief based on one equation I derived two ways, that there is exactly no dark matter, no inflationary matter, and no dark energy in the Universe. It is wonderfully ironic that such a conservative skeptical position will be dismissed out of hand by serious researchers in these areas of study.

So what is that equation that is the foundation of my belief? All it takes is a little standard math, played with in a different way. In the classical limit of GR, we get the work horse of practical cosmology, Newtons' law, and I have included the term for rotation:

[tex]m\frac{(V(R))^2}{R} - \frac{G m M}{R^2} = \frac{d m V}{d t}[/tex]

This is the one that fails for disk galaxies. Since this doesn't work, people have tried two fixes. One is from the Modification of Newtonian Dynamics, or MOND, that transforms the gravity force term from a R-2 law to R-1 when the gravitational acceleration is super small. That worked for more than a hundred disk galaxies, but was frowned on since it lacked a good theory. It also lost out based on data from a bullet galaxy passing though another galaxy. Now people claim the only other possibility is to stuff the M box with dark matter, in just the right amount in the right place to get both the speed and stability down. How convenient.

How can one stop here, when there is that other side of the equation? It is a change in momentum people, changes in mass and velocity in spacetime. The deep, true rule for gravity is completely relativistic. The classical law will reveal a shadow of this. By the product rule of calculus, the change in momentum is the result of a constant mass times the change in velocity with respect to spacetime plus a constant velocity times the change in mass with respect to spacetime. We know what the "constant mass times the change in velocity with respect to spacetime" becomes, mA. That is the only one that every gets any light. There are two possibilities for the other term, "constant velocity times the change in mass with respect to spacetime". One would be a change in time, V dm/dt. That happens for rocket ships, but not the Universe, which does not change rapidly. We are boiling down a relativistic problem to a classical one, so formally the other effect of the force of gravity could be Vc dm/dR (check the units, dimensional analysis matters unless you pay your mortgage doing work on strings). I have had the audacity to jot this down a few times for professional physicists, and they want to know what it is, what is its name? It is the product rule of calculus, with a relativistic twist. It says that the force of gravity determines the mass distribution in space. It will provide an utterly new constant velocity solution for classical gravity problems. The rotation profile of disk galaxies is a problem that needs a stable constant velocity solution. The big bang problem needs a stable constant velocity solution. Here is the new kid on the block:

[tex]m \frac{(V(R))^2}{R} - \frac{G m M}{R^2} = m \frac{d V}{d t}+ V \frac{d m}{d R/c}[/tex]

Maybe not so new, I discussed this in posts #195 and #236. I am trying to get my courage up to try and tackle a real problem with it (specifically, the rotation profile of NGC3198, I like to focus on problems that concrete). If in the earliest time, the constant velocity solution was most important, the flat nature of the cosmic background radiation might have a new math explanation. The tug of war between these two terms could lead to a number of epochs where the amount of force of acceleration apparent as mA varies. At the current time, the amount seen for mA is decreasing a bit.

Discussions of the Planck scalar and quantum gravity strike me as utterly irrelevant. The problems cited are all large scale and classical. You certainly will have plenty of people to talk to. Fortunately, I like climbing alone but try to leave clear directions on how to do a similar climb.

Doug
 
  • #489
sweetser said:
Hello Lawrence:

In Will's paper, he does not know what the eccentricities are, nor the right M/R, so he is making a sophisticated exploration of the possibilities. Calling it a guessing game was unfair to this work, but was a little verbal flare, nothing more.
Doug

He discusses a range of these situations, which is from an experimental perspective relevant.

sweetser said:
Good to see you missed the point. You made the claim that this particular work was relevant to assessing if the exponential metric has been shown experimentally to be in error. Will's work is fine as it stands, but is not relevant to this forum.

You have yet to publicly back off the claim that the exponential metric should be rejected on experimental grounds we have today.
Doug

I said I think GEM has been falsified. To be honest I'd have to dig deeper into this matter, but it was my understanding that current astronomical measurements probed to ppN on the order where you claim there is a change. At this stage I will say things might be uncertain.

sweetser said:
I can dump whatever I want into a Lagrange density, takes some derivatives, and end up with field equations.
Doug

In a sense, sort of. But your results may be meaningless. Seriously, as this is about Riemannian geometry and differential geometry there is a body of work on this which lead to things such as Bianchi identities. It is all based around noncommutative bases of bundles or affine constructions. Symmetric structures emerge in an sort of "oblique" way in supermanifold theory.

I have a lot of work to do besides pouring over your work here. One problem is that there is an historical trend of:

In vino veritas

In video veritas

In cyber veritas,

where by extension you Mathematica work is claimed to be true because, ... well it is done by ... . Look the problem is that Mathematica will give an output, based on strict Boolean operations which are programs to do math operations perfectly, but if the input is wrong to start then Mathematica will give wrong output.

It would require an exhausting amount of work to pour through your stuff, complete with equations written out in brutal form with \partial all explicitely represented. There is not much manifestly covariant formalism, nor have I seen any mathematical theorem-proof constructions. Actually to be honest I have not read a one to five short paragraph discription/essay of 1000 words or less just exactly what this is really all about. What is the motivation, is there some central physical principle here that can be stated in some short elegant way? To be honest what I see now is the same as what I saw two years ago when I encountered this --- a lot of complicated equations and a lot of "fixes and patches" you seem to keep having to perform.

Lawrence B. Crowell
 
  • #490
Pithy unified field theory

Hello Lawrence:
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
my understanding that current astronomical measurements probed to ppN on the order where you claim there is a change. At this stage I will say things might be uncertain.

Fair enough.
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
Seriously, as this is about Riemannian geometry and differential geometry there is a body of work on this which lead to things such as Bianchi identities. It is all based around noncommutative bases of bundles or affine constructions. Symmetric structures emerge in an sort of "oblique" way in supermanifold theory.

And just as seriously, I understand why this holds together so tightly from a logical perspective. I have even learned from you how odd it is to try and tack on something symmetric to this construction, which is not what I am trying to do. Every tight web of logic has an underlying assumption. What underlies this is the assumption that the Riemann curvature tensor is necessary to describe the physical force of gravity. GR does work that way, we have darn great data to say GR is correct. All vetted researchers try to recreate GR in a wider context, or do a technical variation on the rank 2 field theory theme. I hope to show that GR, as good as it is, is not good enough for a unified field theory, it will be a challenge to challenge. I heard no reply to the long standing energy problem which is well known and well ignored today. There is no trivial way around that problem. If the Riemann curvature tensor is not relevant to the way unified fields in Nature work, then the Bianchi identities - a property of the Riemann curvature tensor - are also not important, nor are the bundles built on top of it all.
Lawrence B. Crowell said:
It would require an exhausting amount of work to pour through your stuff...

I certainly will not apologize for that. The Maxwell equations require a huge amount of work to understand, and most undergraduates never get it. Jackson's red book is full of technical details that take work to understand. My proposal contains the Maxwell equations as a formal subset. I also am trying to do gravity, so that makes things quite a bit more complicated, because I have to make a link to the divergence of a connection. I have to show to those oh-so-demanding people who work with GR that there is a metric solution to my field equations that is compatible with all current tests of gravity so far. I also have data that should I achieve such a goal, they say they are too busy to listen (note, this is an observation, not a complaint).

I may take up the 1000 word challenge, but it is a trap. Keep it short, keep it sweet, and people will say I haven't thought though some issue (it must be spin 2, you must get the precession of the perihelion of Mercury, what about strong field tests, demonstrate energy conservation...). Then there are those bogus complaints, such as "There is not much manifestly covariant formalism". I put in some effort to write out [itex]\nabla[/itex] because that is how the covariant derivative is written out. It is the only one that I ever use, even when I resort to looking at derivatives with respect to x, y, and z, and write them as [itex]-c \frac{\partial ^2 Az}{\partial t\partial z}[/itex], I mean these are covariant partial derivatives. I use x, y, and z because I need to communicate with people who should be generous enough to know I don't mean the theory only makes sense in Euclidean coordinates.

I rather enjoy fixes and patches. I learn by humbly bumbling. My action still takes up only 2 lines. The field equations fit on t-shirt. The graphs for the Hamilton and Even representation of quaternions fit on a button. There are many details behind these compact statements. Kind of like the Lagrangian of GR (just R), and the Einstein field equations: not much text that one can write a 1300+ page book about them.

Oh, and I am very persistent. You tuned in two years ago, but the project started out in April of 1996 when I posted a question on the Internet to form a brief definition of time. In the Fall of that year I tackled a special relativity class at MIT. By April of '97 I had my first mix of Maxwell and quaternions. The GEM field equations were jotted down in August '99. It took a year and a half to find a connection to the exponential metric via the force. The new constant velocity solution for gravity was found in '01. By '02 I had a tensor expression for my action. I think my big break of '04 was showing the divergence of the Christoffel of the exponential metric was something Laplace would recognize. The developments of '07 were analytical animation used to visualize the symmetries U(1), SU(2), and SU(3), along with figuring out how to spot spin 2 symmetry in a 4-current, 4-potential coupling term. This year I have the even representation of quaternions with the group K4:6 to be used in a completely quaternion action. I understand why you don't want to get on this bus, and you might appreciate that the bus has enough momentum to keep it rolling forward.

Doug
 

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