Causal fermion systems explained
The theory of causal fermion systems is an approach to describe fundamental physics. It provides a unification of the weak, the strong and the electromagnetic forces with gravity at the level of classical field theory.[1] [2] Moreover, it gives quantum mechanics as a limiting case and has revealed close connections to quantum field theory.[3] [4] Therefore, it is a candidate for a unified physical theory.Instead of introducing physical objects on a preexisting spacetime manifold, the general concept is to derive spacetime as well as all the objects therein as secondary objects from the structures of an underlying causal fermion system. This concept also makes it possible to generalize notions of differential geometry to the non-smooth setting.[5] In particular, one can describe situations when spacetime no longer has a manifold structure on the microscopic scale (like a spacetime lattice or other discrete or continuous structures on the Planck scale). As a result, the theory of causal fermion systems is a proposal for quantum geometry and an approach to quantum gravity.
Causal fermion systems were introduced by Felix Finster and collaborators.
Motivation and physical concept
The physical starting point is the fact that the Dirac equation in Minkowski space has solutions of negative energy which are usually associated to the Dirac sea. Taking the concept seriously that the states of the Dirac sea form an integral part of the physical system, one finds that many structures (like the causal and metric structures as well as the bosonic fields) can be recovered from the wave functions of the sea states. This leads to the idea that the wave functions of all occupied states (including the sea states) should be regarded as the basic physical objects, and that all structures in spacetime arise as a result of the collective interaction of the sea states with each other and with the additional particles and "holes" in the sea. Implementing this picture mathematically leads to the framework of causal fermion systems.
More precisely, the correspondence between the above physical situation and the mathematical framework is obtained as follows. All occupied states span a Hilbert space of wave functions in Minkowski space
. The observable information on the distribution of the wave functions in spacetime is encoded in the
local correlation operators
which in an
orthonormal basis
have the matrix representation
(F(x)
=-\overline{\psii(x)}\psij(x)
(where
is the
adjoint spinor).In order to make the wave functions into the basic physical objects, one considers the set
as a set of
linear operators on an
abstract Hilbert space. The structures of Minkowski space are all disregarded, except for the volume measure
, which is transformed to a corresponding
measure on the linear operators (the
"universal measure"). The resulting structures, namely a Hilbert space together with a measure on the linear operators thereon, are the basic ingredients of a causal fermion system.
The above construction can also be carried out in more general spacetimes. Moreover, taking the abstract definition as the starting point, causal fermion systems allow for the description of generalized "quantum spacetimes." The physical picture is that one causal fermion system describes a spacetime together with all structures and objects therein (like the causal and the metric structures, wave functions and quantum fields). In order to single out the physically admissible causal fermion systems, one must formulate physical equations. In analogy to the Lagrangian formulation of classical field theory, the physical equations for causal fermion systems are formulated via a variational principle, the so-called causal action principle. Since one works with different basic objects, the causal action principle has a novel mathematical structure where one minimizes a positive action under variations of the universal measure. The connection to conventional physical equations is obtained in a certain limiting case (the continuum limit) in which the interaction can be described effectively by gauge fields coupled to particles and antiparticles, whereas the Dirac sea is no longer apparent.
General mathematical setting
In this section the mathematical framework of causal fermion systems is introduced.
Definition of a causal fermion system
A causal fermion system of spin dimension
is a triple
where
}) is a complex
Hilbert space.
is the set of all
self-adjoint linear operators of
finite rank on
which (counting multiplicities) have at most
positive and at most
negative eigenvalues.
is a
measure on
.The measure
is referred to as the
universal measure.
As will be outlined below, this definition is rich enough to encode analogs of the mathematical structures needed to formulate physical theories. In particular, a causal fermion system gives rise to a spacetime together with additional structures that generalize objects like spinors, the metric and curvature. Moreover, it comprises quantum objects like wave functions and a fermionic Fock state.[6]
The causal action principle
Inspired by the Langrangian formulation of classical field theory, the dynamics on a causal fermion system is described by a variational principle defined as follows.
Given a Hilbert space
}) and the spin dimension
, the set
is defined as above. Then for any
, the product
is an operator of rank at most
. It is not necessarily self-adjoint because in general
. We denote the non-trivial eigenvalues of the operator
(counting
algebraic multiplicities) by
} . Moreover, the
spectral weight
is defined by
The
Lagrangian is introduced by
{l{L}}(x,y)=|(xy)2|-
{}|xy|2
=
(
-
)2\geq0{}.
The
causal action is defined by
}\times } (x,y)d\rho(x)d\rho(y) .
The causal action principle is to minimize
under variations of
within the class of (positive)
Borel measures under the following constraints:
}\times } |xy|^2 d\rho(x)d\rho(y) \leq C for some positive constant
.
} \text(x) d\rho(x) is kept fixed.
is preserved.Here on
} one considers the
topology induced by the
-norm on the bounded linear operators on
.
The constraints prevent trivial minimizers and ensure existence, provided that
is finite-dimensional.
[7] This variational principle also makes sense in the case that the total volume
is infinite if one considers variations
of bounded variation with
.
Inherent structures
. This means that spacetime is a
set of points enriched by topological and geometric structures. In the context of causal fermion systems, spacetime does not need to have a manifold structure. Instead, spacetime
is a set of operators on a Hilbert space (a subset of
). This implies additional inherent structures that correspond to and generalize usual objects on a spacetime manifold.
For a causal fermion system
,we define
spacetime
as the
support of the universal measure,
With the
topology induced by
,spacetime
is a
topological space.
Causal structure
For
, we denote the non-trivial eigenvalues of the operator
(counting
algebraic multiplicities) by
} .The points
and
are defined to be
spacelike separated if all the
have the same absolute value. They are
timelike separated if the
do not all have the same absolute value and are all real. In all other cases, the points
and
are
lightlike separated.
This notion of causality fits together with the "causality" of the above causal action in the sense that if two spacetime points
are space-like separated, then the Lagrangian
vanishes. This corresponds to the physical notion of
causality that spatially separated spacetime points do not interact. This causal structure is the reason for the notion "causal" in causal fermion system and causal action.
Let
denote the orthogonal projection on the subspace
Sx:=x({l{H}})\subset{l{H}}
. Then the sign of the functional
iTr(xy\pix\piy-yx\piy\pix)
distinguishes the
future from the
past. In contrast to the structure of a
partially ordered set, the relation "lies in the future of" is in general not transitive. But it is transitive on the macroscopic scale in typical examples.
Spinors and wave functions
For every
the
spin space is defined by
; it is a subspace of
of dimension at most
. The
spin scalar product
defined by
{\prec}u|v{\succ}x=-{\langle}u|xv{\rangle}l{H
}\qquad \text u,v \in S_xis an indefinite
inner product on
of
signature
with
.
A wave function
is a mapping
\psi{}:{}M → {l{H}} with \psi(x)\inSx forallx\inM{}.
On wave functions for which the norm
defined by
{|||}\psi{|||}2=\intM\left\langle\psi(x)||x|\psi(x)\right\ranglel{H
}d\rho(x)is finite (where
is the absolute value of the symmetric operator
), one can define the inner product
{en{<}}\psi|\phi{ose{>}}=\intM{\prec}\psi(x)|\phi(x){\succ}x{}d\rho(x){}.
Together with the topology induced by the norm
, one obtains a
Krein space ({{l{K}}},{en{<}} ⋅ | ⋅ {ose{>}})
.
To any vector
we can associate the wave function
(where
is again the orthogonal projection to the spin space).This gives rise to a distinguished family of wave functions, referred to as thewave functions of the
occupied states.
The fermionic projector
The kernel of the fermionic projector
is defined by
(where
is again the orthogonal projection on the spin space,and
denotes the restriction to
). The
fermionic projector
is the operator
P{}:{}{{l{K}}} → {{l{K}}}{}, (P\psi)(x)=\intMP(x,y)\psi(y)d\rho(y){},
which has the dense domain of definition given by all vectors
satisfying the conditions
\phi:=\intMx\psi(x)d\rho(x){}\in{}{l{H}} and {|||}\phi{|||}<infty{}.
As a consequence of the causal action principle, the kernel of the fermionic projector has additional normalization properties
[8] which justify the name
projector.
Connection and curvature
Being an operator from one spin space to another, the kernel of the fermionic projector gives relations between different spacetime points. This fact can be used to introduce a spin connection
The basic idea is to take a
polar decomposition of
. The construction becomes more involved by the fact that the spin connection should induce a corresponding
metric connection\nablax,y:Ty → Tx isometric,
where the tangent space
is a specific subspace of the linear operators on
endowed with a Lorentzian metric.The
spin curvature is defined as the
holonomy of the spin connection,
ak{R}(x,y,z)=Dx,yDy,zDz,x:Sx → Sx.
Similarly, the metric connection gives rise to
metric curvature. These geometric structures give rise to a proposal for a
quantum geometry.
[9] The Euler–Lagrange equations and the linearized field equations
A minimizer
of the causal action satisfies corresponding
Euler–Lagrange equations. They state that the function
defined by
\ell\kappa(x):=\intM({l{L}}\kappa(x,y)+\kappa|xy|2)d\rho(y)-ak{s}
(with two Lagrange parameters
and
) vanishes and is minimal on the support of
,
} \ell_\kappa(x) = 0 \,. For the analysis, it is convenient to introduce
jets
consisting of a real-valued function
on
and a vector field
on
along
, and to denote the combination of multiplication and directional derivative by
} g(x) := a(x)\, g(x) + \big(D_u g \big)(x). Then the Euler–Lagrange equations imply that the
weak Euler–Lagrange equations
} \ell|_M = 0hold for any test jet
.
Families of solutions of the Euler–Lagrange equations are generated infinitesimally by a jet
which satisfies the
linearized field equations\langleak{u},\Deltaak{v}\rangle|M=0,
to be satisfied for all test jets
, where the Laplacian
is defined by
\langleak{u},\Deltaak{v}\rangle(x):=\nablaak{u
} \bigg(\int_M \big(\nabla_ + \nabla_ \big) \mathcal(x,y)\, d\rho(y) - \nabla_\mathfrak \mathfrak \bigg) \,.
The Euler–Lagrange equations describe the dynamics of the causal fermion system, whereas small perturbations of the system are described by the linearized field equations.
Conserved surface layer integrals
In the setting of causal fermion systems, spatial integrals are expressed by so-called surface layer integrals.[10] [11] In general terms, a surface layer integral is a double integral of the form
\int\Omega(\intM … {l{L}}(x,y)d\rho(y))d\rho(x),
where one variable is integrated over a subset
, and the other variable is integrated over the complement of
. It is possible to express the usual conservation laws for charge, energy, ... in terms of surface layer integrals. The corresponding conservation laws are a consequence of the Euler–Lagrange equations of the causal action principle and the linearized field equations. For the applications, the most important surface layer integrals are the
current integral
, the
symplectic form | \Omega |
\sigma | |
| \rho(ak{u},ak{v}) |
, the
surface layer inner product \langle
| \Omega |
ak{u},ak{v}\rangle | |
| \rho |
and the
nonlinear surface layer integral \gamma\Omega(\tilde{\rho},\rho)
.
Bosonic Fock space dynamics
Based on the conservation laws for the above surface layer integrals, the dynamics of a causal fermion system as described by the Euler–Lagrange equations corresponding to the causal action principle can be rewritten as a linear, norm-preserving dynamics on the bosonic Fock space built up of solutions of the linearized field equations.[4] In the so-called holomorphic approximation, the time evolution respects the complex structure, giving rise to a unitary time evolution on the bosonic Fock space.
A fermionic Fock state
If
has finite dimension
, choosing an orthonormal basis
of
and taking the wedge product of the corresponding wave functions
(
\wedge … \wedge
)(x1,\ldots,xf)
gives a state of an
-particle fermionic
Fock space. Due to the total anti-symmetrization, this state depends on the choice of the basis of
only by a phase factor.
[12] This correspondence explains why the vectors in the particle space are to be interpreted as
fermions. It also motivates the name causal
fermion system.
Underlying physical principles
Causal fermion systems incorporate several physical principles in a specific way:
- A local gauge principle: In order to represent the wave functions in components, one chooses bases of the spin spaces. Denoting the signature of the spin scalar product at
by
, a pseudo-orthonormal basis
(ak{e}\alpha(x))\alpha=1,\ldots,
}_x+_x} of
is given by
{\prec}ak{e}\alpha|ak{e}\beta{\succ}=s\alpha{}\delta\alpha with s1,\ldots,s{ak{p
}_x} = 1,\;\; s_, \ldots, s_ =-1 .
Then a wave function
can be represented with component functions,
}_x+_x} \psi^\alpha(x)\mathfrak_\alpha(x) .
The freedom of choosing the bases
independently at every spacetime point corresponds to local unitary transformations of the wave functions,
}_x+_x} U(x)^\alpha_\beta \,\, \psi^\beta(x)\quad \text \quad U(x)\in \text(_x, _x) .
These transformations have the interpretation as local gauge transformations. The gauge group is determined to be the isometry group of the spin scalar product. The causal action is gauge invariant in the sense that it does not depend on the choice of spinor bases.
- The equivalence principle: For an explicit description of spacetime one must work with local coordinates. The freedom in choosing such coordinates generalizes the freedom in choosing general reference frames in a spacetime manifold. Therefore, the equivalence principle of general relativity is respected. The causal action is generally covariant in the sense that it does not depend on the choice of coordinates.
- The Pauli exclusion principle: The fermionic Fock state associated to the causal fermion system makes it possible to describe the many-particle state by a totally antisymmetric wave function. This gives agreement with the Pauli exclusion principle.
- The principle of causality is incorporated by the form of the causal action in the sense that spacetime points with spacelike separation do not interact.
Limiting cases
Causal fermion systems have mathematically sound limiting cases that give a connection to conventional physical structures.
Lorentzian spin geometry of globally hyperbolic spacetimes
Starting on any globally hyperbolic Lorentzian spin manifold
with spinor bundle
, one gets into the framework of causal fermion systems by choosing
({l{H}},{\langle}.|.{\rangle}l{H
}) as a subspace of the solution space of the
Dirac equation. Defining the so-called
local correlation operator
for
by
{\langle}\psi|F(p)\phi{\rangle}l{H
} = -\psi | \phi _p(where
is the inner product on the fibre
) and introducing the universal measure as the push-forward of the volume measure on
,
one obtains a causal fermion system. For the local correlation operators to be well-defined,
must consist of continuous sections, typically making it necessary to introduce a
regularization on the microscopic scale
. In the limit
, all the intrinsic structures on the causal fermion system (like the causal structure, connection and curvature) go over to the corresponding structures on the Lorentzian spin manifold. Thus the geometry of spacetime is encoded completely in the corresponding causal fermion systems.
Quantum mechanics and classical field equations
The Euler–Lagrange equations corresponding to the causal action principle have a well-defined limit if the spacetimes
of the causal fermion systems go over to
Minkowski space. More specifically, one considers a sequence of causal fermion systems (for example with
finite-dimensional in order to ensure the existence of the fermionic Fock state as well as of minimizers of the causal action), such that the corresponding wave functions go over to a configuration of interacting Dirac seas involving additional particle states or "holes" in the seas. This procedure, referred to as the
continuum limit, gives effective equations having the structure of the
Dirac equation coupled to classical
field equations. For example, for a simplified model involving three elementary fermionic particlesin spin dimension two, one obtains an interaction via a classical axial gauge field
described by the coupled
Dirac– and
Yang–Mills equations\begin{align}
(i\partial/ +\gamma5A/ -m)\psi&=0\\
C0
Aj-\BoxAk)-C2Ak&=12\pi2\bar\psi\gamma5\gammak\psi.
\end{align}
Taking the non-relativistic limit of the Dirac equation, one obtains the
Pauli equation or the
Schrödinger equation, giving the correspondence to
quantum mechanics. Here
and
depend on the regularization and determine the coupling constant as well as the rest mass.
Likewise, for a system involving neutrinos in spin dimension 4, one gets effectively a massive
gauge field coupled to the left-handed component of the Dirac spinors. The fermion configuration of the standard model can be described in spin dimension 16.
The Einstein field equations
For the just-mentioned system involving neutrinos, the continuum limit also yields the Einstein field equations coupled to the Dirac spinors,
Rjk-
Rgjk+Λgjk=\kappaTjk[\Psi,A],
up to corrections of higher order in the curvature tensor. Here the cosmological constant
is undetermined, and
denotes the energy-momentum tensor of the spinors and the
gauge field. The gravitation constant
depends on the regularization length.
Quantum field theory in Minkowski space
Starting from the coupled system of equations obtained in the continuum limit and expanding in powers of the coupling constant, one obtains integrals which correspond to Feynman diagrams on the tree level. Fermionic loop diagrams arise due to the interaction with the sea states, whereas bosonic loop diagrams appear when taking averages over the microscopic (in generally non-smooth) spacetime structure of a causal fermion system (so-called microscopic mixing). The detailed analysis and comparison with standard quantum field theory is work in progress.
Further reading
Notes and References
- Book: Finster, Felix . The Principle of the Fermionic Projector . American Mathematical Society . Providence, R.I . 2006 . 978-0-8218-3974-4 . 61211466. Chapters 1-4Chapters 5-8Appendices
- Book: Finster, Felix . Fundamental Theories of Physics . 186. The Continuum Limit of Causal Fermion Systems . Springer International Publishing . Cham . 2016 . 978-3-319-42066-0 . 0168-1222 . 10.1007/978-3-319-42067-7 . 1605.04742. 119123208 .
- Finster . Felix . Perturbative quantum field theory in the framework of the fermionic projector . Journal of Mathematical Physics . 55 . 4 . 2014 . 0022-2488 . 10.1063/1.4871549 . 042301. 1310.4121. 2014JMP....55d2301F . 10515274 .
- Finster . Felix . Kamran . Niky . Niky Kamran. Complex structures on jet spaces and bosonic Fock space dynamics for causal variational principles . Pure and Applied Mathematics Quarterly . 2021 . 17 . 55–140 . 10.4310/PAMQ.2021.v17.n1.a3 . 1808.03177. 119602224 .
- Finster . Felix . Kamran . Niky . Niky Kamran. Spinors on singular spaces and the topology of causal fermion systems . Memoirs of the American Mathematical Society . 259 . 1251 . 2019 . 0065-9266 . 10.1090/memo/1251 . v+83 . 1403.7885. 44295203 .
- Book: Finster . Felix . Grotz . Andreas . Schiefeneder . Daniela . Quantum Field Theory and Gravity . limited . Causal Fermion Systems: A Quantum Space-Time Emerging From an Action Principle . Springer Basel . Basel . 2012 . 978-3-0348-0042-6 . 10.1007/978-3-0348-0043-3_9 . 157–182. 1102.2585. 39687703 .
- Finster . Felix . Causal variational principles on measure spaces . Journal für die reine und angewandte Mathematik . 2010 . 646 . 2010 . 0075-4102 . 10.1515/crelle.2010.069 . 141–194. 0811.2666. 15462221 .
- Finster . Felix . Kleiner . Johannes . Noether-like theorems for causal variational principles . Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations . 55 . 2016 . 2 . 0944-2669 . 10.1007/s00526-016-0966-y . 35. 1506.09076. 116964958 .
- Finster . Felix . Grotz . Andreas . A Lorentzian quantum geometry . Advances in Theoretical and Mathematical Physics . 16 . 4 . 2012 . 1095-0761 . 10.4310/atmp.2012.v16.n4.a3 . 1197–1290. 1107.2026. 54886814 .
- Finster . Felix . Kleiner . Johannes . A Hamiltonian formulation of causal variational principles . Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations . 56 . 2017 . 3 . 0944-2669 . 10.1007/s00526-017-1153-5 . 73 . 1612.07192. 8742665 .
- Finster . Felix . Kleiner . Johannes . A class of conserved surface layer integrals for causal variational principles . Calculus of Variations and Partial Differential Equations . 58 . 2019 . 0944-2669 . 10.1007/s00526-018-1469-9 . 38 . 1801.08715. 54692714 .
- Finster . Felix . Entanglement and second quantization in the framework of the fermionic projector . Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical . 43 . 39 . 2010 . 1751-8113 . 10.1088/1751-8113/43/39/395302 . 395302. 0911.0076. 2010JPhA...43M5302F . 33980400 .