Six years ago I wrote a paper called “Remarks on the group-theoretical foundations of particle physics” that was later published in the International Journal of Geometrical Methods in Modern Physics, and can be found on the arxiv at https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.13390/. I wrote the paper after conversations with one of the editors of the journal during a meeting at the Isaac Newton Institute in Cambridge, just before the first covid lockdown. But the ideas go back several years earlier, to 2015, when I analysed the group-theoretical obstructions to quantisation of gravity, and realised that the conventional identification of the Dirac group SL(2,C) with the Lorentz group SO(3,1) was mathematically impossible. I therefore proposed the group SL(4,R) of all 4×4 real matrices with determinant 1 as the only symmetry group that could plausibly unite the quantum theory of Dirac with the gravity theory of Einstein.
In the intervening period, I have examined all sorts of alternatives, that are closer to various parts of various established theories, and therefore might have a better chance of being accepted, but in the end I come back to the fact that my first instincts appear to have been correct. The group SL(4,R) is the only group that can describe the symmetries of all fundamental theories simultaneously. It is the only group that has any chance at all of being “the” symmetry group of the whole of physics, on all scales from sub-proton scale to the cosmological scale.
I have identified five different scales on which this group appears to be the correct group to describe physics: (1) the gravitational scale of Einstein’s theory, (2) the classical/relativistic scale of Hamiltonian mechanics, (3) the quantum (atomic) scale of Dirac’s theory, (4) the weak (nuclear) scale and (5) the strong (sub-proton) scale. At different scales, different subgroups of SL(4,R) become more important, and others less so. In relativity, SO(3,1) is paramount, while in classical Hamiltonian mechanics it is SL(3,R). In Dirac’s theory it is SL(2,C), embedded in the Clifford algebra Cl(3,1), and on the weak nuclear scale SO(4) describes lepton and quark symmetries for three generations. At the strong scale, the group SU(3) is usually used, but in order for the strong force to generate the mass of the proton it is necessary to use a non-compact group, most likely SL(3,R).
I’ll start at the biggest scales, where SL(4,R) is the group of symmetries that is supposed to apply to General Relativity (Einstein’s theory of gravity). In principle, this is the transformation group between spacetime coordinates that are natural for two mutually accelerating observers, although many other interpretations are current. If it transforms spacetime coordinates, then it must also transform the components of the gravitational field, which in Einstein’s theory is a 10-dimensional field written as symmetric 2-tensors on a 4-vector for SL(4,R). This is an irreducible representation of SL(4,R), that breaks up as 1+9 for SO(3,1), a different 1+9 for SO(4), 1+1+3+5 for SO(3), 1+3+6 for SL(3,R), 1+3+3+3 for SU(2), and 4+6 for SL(2,C). Similarly, the same groups transform the components of the electromagnetic field, written as anti-symmetric 2-tensors. This representation is again irreducible for SL(4,R), and for SO(3,1), and splits in different ways as 3+3 for SO(4), SO(3) and SL(3,R), but splits as 1+1+1+3 for SU(2) and as 1+1+4 for SL(2,C).
In this formulation, the electromagnetic field is self-dual, and SL(4,R) acts on it as SO(3,3). It is therefore very clear to see the separation into two 3-dimensional fields, one electric and one magnetic, that mix together under all non-Euclidean symmetries of spacetime. The gravitational field, on the other hand, is not self-dual. Unfortunately, Einstein assumes it is self-dual, which means his theory, despite its name, actually contradicts the general principle of relativity. It is an effective theory for small deviations from SO(3) symmetry, but it is not correct in general. There are other theories that do a better job for other symmetry groups – for example, Asher Yahalom’s “Retarded Gravity” is an SO(3,1) theory that does a good job of correcting Einstein’s theory out to whole galaxy scales, where Einstein’s theory is known observationally to break down. But it is not a complete SL(4,R) theory, so cannot explain the cosmological constant. In other words, it explains dark matter away, but not dark energy.
Next I’ll turn to Hamiltonian mechanics. In its original non-relativistic form, it generalised the SO(3) symmetry of Newtonian mechanics to SL(3,R). This allows you to scale distance up, as you scale momentum down, in three directions independently, so as to transform circular orbits into elliptical orbits and explain that the underlying physics is independent of the shape of the orbit. This means that the 3-dimensional representations on position and momentum are dual to each other, and are no longer self-dual as they were in the Newtonian case. The duality is quantised by the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, which allows you to specify either position or momentum as precisely as you like, but not both simultaneously. Planck’s constant tells you exactly what the granularity of position x momentum actually is.
Relativistic Hamiltonian mechanics extends position to include time, and extends momentum to include energy, so that the symmetries of SO(3,1) and SL(3,R) all apply, and generate the full group SL(4,R). Any relativistic Hamiltonian theory therefore has SL(4,R) symmetry. Since the principles of relativity and of Hamiltonian mechanics are absolutely fundamental to the whole of theoretical and mathematical physics, it follows that every proposed new theory of physics must have SL(4,R) symmetry in order to be taken seriously. Again I emphasise that the 4-position and 4-momentum representations are dual to each other, not to themselves.
Moving down to the next level, the Dirac theory of the electron, and its extension to theories of quantum physics and quantum chemistry, we find the Dirac algebra as an algebra of 4×4 complex matrices, identified as the complex Clifford algebra of Minkowski spacetime. The complex structure here makes no mathematical sense, but is needed for including the weak force, as well as various technical constructions such as the Laplace transform. For pure quantum electrodynamics, however, we need only the real Clifford algebra Cl(3,1), which is an algebra of 4×4 real matrices, generated by SL(4,R) plus scalars. Incidentally, this is not the same as Cl(1,3), which is an algebra of 2×2 quaternion matrices, so the signature of spacetime in the Dirac model must be (3,1) and not (1,3).
This version of the Dirac algebra is generated by the gamma matrices i.gamma_0, i.gamma_1, i.gamma_2, i.gamma_3 and i.gamma_5, but the conventional choices for these matrices are not all real, so quite a different choice of basis is required in order to see the isomorphism with SL(4,R). In particular, the four real spacetime directions are quite hard to extract from the standard basis of the spinors. A subgroup SL(3,R) can be obtained by fixing the real “scalar” gamma_0.gamma_1 + i.gamma_2 + gamma_5.gamma_3, while SO(4) can be generated by a “left-handed” copy of SU(2) on i.gamma_0, i.gamma_5 and gamma_0.gamma_5 and a “right-handed” copy on gamma_1.gamma_2, gamma_1.gamma_3 and gamma_2.gamma_3. The chirality here is obtained by relating the generators to SL(3,R), not to SL(2,C), since it is SL(3,R) that treats gamma_1, gamma_2 and gamma_3 in three different ways.
Indeed, the conventional interpretation of SL(2,C) as the Lorentz group makes no sense. Each of the two copies of SU(2) in SO(4) extends to three independent copies of SL(2,C), which means that the choice of SL(2,C) in the Dirac model not only distinguishes left-handed from right-handed (neutrinos from electrons) but also makes a choice of one of the three generations. This is the reason for the difficulty in including three generations in the Standard Model, and in Grand Unified Theories based on it. It is the decision to make SL(2,C) fundamental for all particles, rather than Dirac’s original SL(2,C) which was specifically devoted to the electron, that is responsible for this difficulty. We must recover the original Dirac philosophy, that the SL(2,C) model is a model of the electron, not a model of quantum mechanics in full generality.
Well, I seem to have already included quite a lot of what should have been the next level down, that is the weak force. At this level we treat SO(4) = SU(2) x SU(2) as the important symmetry group. Since the space symmetries have been moved from SU(2)_R to SL(3,R), the group SU(2)_R is available for internal symmetries instead. My proposal is to use SU(2)_R for the three generations of neutrinos (where unbroken symmetry appears to hold), and SU(2)_L for the three types of charged particles (charge -1, -1/3 and +2/3), so that the other 9 degrees of freedom in SL(4,R) are available for mass parameters for these 9 particles. The conventional choice of the “third component of weak isospin” is a choice to treat the electron as fundamental, and the quarks as less important. But a full theory of three generations of leptons and quarks requires us to use all three components of weak isospin also.
Finally, we come to the strong force. In my 2022 paper with Manogue and Dray “Octions: an E_8 description of the Standard Model” (see also https://arxiv.org/abs/2204.05310/) we used SL(3,R) for the strong force gauge group, in place of the Standard Model SU(3). I have argued strongly against this on many occasions, most recently because I need SL(3,R) for the weak force. But what if we are both right? What if the strong force and the weak force are not independent parts of the model, but just different ways of looking at the same model? The main argument in favour of using SL(3,R) for the strong force, instead of the conventional SU(3), is that SU(3) is completely independent of mass, and yet it is said that the strong force is responsible for generating 99% of the mass of the proton. It is mathematically impossible to describe mass with a compact group, so the conventional SU(3) is inadequate for the task it has been given.
In the octions model, however, we only use SL(3,R), and do not extend to SL(4,R). Nevertheless, SL(4,R) is available in the model, so we might as well use it. The extra 7 degrees of freedom are: one real scalar, 3 compact degrees of freedom that can be identified either with weak SU(2)_L, or with the generation symmetry, and 3 boosts that extend from quarks to include leptons, and therefore could reasonably be identified with electron masses for three generations. In other words, SL(4,R) provides a model in which the weak and strong nuclear forces can be united in a single gauge group, that contains two triplet symmetries plus nine independent “fundamental” masses.
This discussion of the five different scales of interpretation of SL(4,R) leads us to the beginnings of unification. The Einstein and Hamilton pictures are very similar, and easily united, and quantised, with only one correction to existing theory required. This is the requirement to correct the false assumption that the gravitational field is self-dual. Of course, this is a very fundamental false assumption, and invalidates the Einstein field equations in their entirely, so won’t be easy to correct.
Similarly, the Dirac and weak/strong nuclear pictures overlap to a large extent. Two corrections to the existing Standard Model are required. First, the identification of SL(2,C) with SO(3,1) must be recognised as observer-dependent, and dependent on the observer’s choice of the definition of the electron as “the” free fundamental particle of matter. Of course, this identification is a fundamental assumption of the entire corpus of quantum mechanics and quantum field theory, so it won’t be easy to give it up. But it has always been known that this equivalence principle, like all others, is only a local equivalence principle, so we must just adopt the Copernican philosophy that we are not (despite our hubris) the centre of the universe.
Second, we must understand that the Yang-Mills assumption that gauge groups are compact is a mathematical assumption that removes the discussion of mass from the model in its entirety. Hence this assumption is not only useless, it is highly counterproductive, and must be abandoned.
So, now, let’s get to the take-home message. The symmetry group SL(4,R) can be used as a symmetry group for all theories of physics at all scales from the interior of a proton to the entire visible cosmos, provided three fundamental assumptions are corrected:
- Self-duality of the gravitational field;
- Equivalence of SL(2,C) and SO(3,1);
- Compactness of the gauge groups.
That’s it. Once you’ve corrected those three fundamental errors, you can get back to shutting up and calculating.