Clifford Algebras, Spinors and $Cl(8,8)$ Unification (2105.11808v1)
Abstract: It is shown how the vector space $V_{8,8}$ arises from the Clifford algebra $Cl(1,3)$ of spacetime. The latter algebra describes fundamental objects such as strings and branes in terms of their $r$-volume degrees of freedom, $x{\mu_1 \mu_2 ...\mu_r}$ $\equiv xM$, $r=0,1,2,3$, that generalizethe concept of center of mass. Taking into account that there are sixteen $xM$, $M=1,2,3,...,16$, and in general $16 \times 15/2 = 120$ rotations of the form $x'M = {RM}_N xN$, we can consider $xM$ as components of a vector $X=xM q_M$, where $q_M$ are generators of the Clifford algebra $Cl(8,8)$. The vector space $V_{8,8}$ has enough room for the unification of the fundamental particles and forces of the standard model. The rotations in $V_{8,8}\otimes \mathbb{C}$ contain the grand unification group $SO(10)$ as a subgroup, and also the Lorentz group $SO(1,3)$. It is shown how the Coleman-Mandula no go theorem can be avoided. Spinors in $V_{8,8}\otimes \mathbb{C}$ are constructed in terms of the wedge products of the basis vectors rewritten in the Witt basis. They satisfy the massless Dirac equation in $M_{8,8}$ with the internal part of the Dirac operator giving the non vanishing masses in four dimensions.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.