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Sheaf Topos Theory: A powerful setting for Lagrangian Field Theory (2504.08095v1)

Published 10 Apr 2025 in math-ph, hep-th, math.CT, and math.MP

Abstract: We provide an introductory exposition to the sheaf topos theoretic description of classical field theory motivated by the rigorous description of both $\bf{(i)}$ the variational calculus of (infinite dimensional) field-theoretic spaces, and $\bf(ii)$ the non-triviality of classical fermionic field spaces. These considerations naturally lead to the definition of the sheaf topos of super smooth sets. We close by indicating natural generalizations necessary to include to the description of infinitesimal structure of field spaces and further the non-perturbative description of (higher) gauge fields.

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Summary

Overview of Sheaf Topos Theory in Lagrangian Field Theory

The paper by Grigorios Giotopoulos titled "Sheaf Topos Theory: A Powerful Setting for Lagrangian Field Theory" introduces an innovative framework for describing classical field theory using sheaf topos theory. This approach is motivated by the need to rigorously describe both the variational calculus in infinite-dimensional spaces and the complexities of classical fermionic field spaces. Furthermore, it explores natural generalizations necessary for the non-perturbative description of higher gauge fields.

The introduction outlines contemporary theoretical physics assumptions that describe the world in terms of field-theoretic, smooth, fermionic, local, gauged, and non-perturbative characteristics. To formalize these aspects, the paper proposes using sheaf topos theory to address the smooth structure and the gauge transformations in field spaces. The paper explores the structure of bosonic and fermionic field spaces, ensuring that physical operations like variational calculus can be executed as if these spaces were finite-dimensional manifolds.

Smooth Sets and Bosonic Field Theory

The paper starts with defining generalized smooth spaces using smooth sets, which are sheaves over the category of smooth Cartesian spaces. A smooth set effectively encodes the smooth structure necessary for field-theoretic spaces, circumventing the technical difficulties of Fréchet manifold theory in the infinite-dimensional context. Crucially, the smooth set framework allows defining operations and maps such as the jet prolongation, Euler--Lagrange maps, and action functionals that preserve this smooth structure, providing a rigorous basis for variational calculus.

Within this context, the paper defines the spaces of field configurations, on-shell fields, and critical points, providing a formal mathematical framework for understanding field theory operations. The discussion is extended to encompass other aspects like symmetries, conserved currents, Cauchy surfaces, and presymplectic geometry in on-shell phase space.

Super Smooth Sets and Fermionic Fields

Giotopoulos further extends the discussion to fermionic fields through super smooth sets. This concept builds on smooth sets but incorporates supergeometry, dealing with spaces that have both even (commuting) and odd (anticommuting) coordinates. The fermionic field spaces are defined with plots that consider both classical configurations and auxiliary odd coordinates. Super smooth sets dynamically encode the relationships between various configurations needed for fermionic field theory.

The paper resolves the long-standing issue of defining classical fermion fields and demonstrates how traditional fermionic formulæ are inherently well-defined maps in super smooth sets.

Future Directions and Generalizations

The paper concludes by indicating future directions for research. It discusses how infinitesimal structures and higher gauge fields extend the framework of sheaf topos theory:

  • Infinitesimal Structures: To rigorously treat the infinitesimal arguments in physics, the paper proposes employing synthetic differential geometry using infinitesimally thickened smooth sets.
  • Higher Gauge Structures: The paper discusses encoding internal symmetries and higher-order gauge transformations using higher groupoids, expandable within the framework of smooth infinity-toposes. This innovative approach holds promise for addressing more complex gauge theories and interactions in field theory.

In summary, Giotopoulos offers a comprehensive framework for modeling the intricate structures in field theory using sheaf topos theory, seamlessly integrating the treatment of bosonic and fermionic fields along with the smooth, infinitesimal, and higher gauge structures. The proposed approach significantly enhances the mathematical rigor and applicability of field theory descriptions.

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