https://plus.google.com/117663015413546257905/posts/D2jALr2L4Wt
Thanks for the "publicly shared" google+ link! It reminds me of the good times when there was "This Week's Finds".
I'm a little put off by the newer social media and structured online communities. So was reluctant to participate in google+
But having publicly shared essays that introduce one to major research that has recently appeared in the TWF manner is SUPER!
So I will be going back there.
Tell me,
John Baez, what is the drawback with Connes' approach that prevents wider adoption? Is it too hard? Is there some missing piece to the picture?
It looks like this is
the way to go if you want a unified model of dynamic geometry and the standard particle model. Why haven't a whole lot more people jumped on the bandwagon? I'll post the link and abstract to that 2013 paper you discussed in your introductory essay.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.8050
Beyond the Spectral Standard Model: Emergence of Pati-Salam Unification
Ali H. Chamseddine,
Alain Connes,
Walter D. van Suijlekom
(Submitted on 30 Apr 2013)
The assumption that space-time is a noncommutative space formed as a product of a continuous four dimensional manifold times a finite space predicts, almost uniquely, the Standard Model with all its fermions, gauge fields, Higgs field and their representations. A strong restriction on the noncommutative space results from the first order condition which came from the requirement that the Dirac operator is a differential operator of order one. Without this restriction, invariance under inner automorphisms requires the inner fluctuations of the Dirac operator to contain a quadratic piece expressed in terms of the linear part. We apply the classification of product noncommutative spaces without the first order condition and show that this leads immediately to a Pati-Salam SU(2)
Rx SU(2)
Lx SU(4) type model which unifies leptons and quarks in four colors. Besides the gauge fields, there are 16 fermions in the (2,1,4)+(1,2,4) representation, fundamental Higgs fields in the (2,2,1), (2,1,4) and (1,1,1+15) representations. Depending on the precise form of the order one condition or not there are additional Higgs fields which are either composite depending on the fundamental Higgs fields listed above, or are fundamental themselves. These additional Higgs fields break spontaneously the Pati-Salam symmetries at high energies to those of the Standard Model.
41 pages, 2 figures.
I've been interested in that young person Walter vSuijlekom ever since
http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.3480
a paper he wrote with Matilde Marcolli that actually tries out a spectral geometry extension of LQG spin networks. WvS is at Nijmegen, where Renate Loll is. To an amateur non-expert like myself it's encouraging to see different approaches to quantum geometry-and-matter coming together. van Suijlekom looks strong, Nijmegen looks like a good place.
In your essay you helped readers by giving a link to an expository essay about grand unifications that you and Heurta wrote. Here's the section on Pati-Salam if anyone here wants to glance at it.
http://math.ucr.edu/~huerta/guts/node18.html
It seems to "intuitize" GUT mathematics to some extent. As Archimedes said "give me a diagram that commutes and I will move the world" or words to that effect.