#!/usr/bin/env python3 """ PST Computation 7 — Stage 6 of the 10-foundational programme ============================================================================ Chirality and the order-one condition, on an explicit one-generation finite geometry. This is the crux and the only stage that engages D_F directly. Track J established: the naive substrate LADDER SU(2) (a number-changing ladder on a single Fock space) is, under either natural chirality grading, vector-like or chirality-mixing -- NOT the Standard Model's chiral SU(2)_L. The resolution in the Connes framework is to use the CHIRAL representation: the quaternions H are represented to act on the LEFT-handed doublets only. Then SU(2)_L is chiral by construction, and the order-one condition [[D_F,a], J b* J^{-1}] = 0 selects the Yukawa form of D_F. This script builds a clean, explicit lepton-sector one-generation finite geometry (8-dim: nu_L,e_L,nu_R,e_R + 4 antiparticles) and verifies: O1 the representation is EVEN ([gamma,a]=0) and the SU(2)_L action of H is CHIRAL (supported on left-handed particles only; annihilates the right-handed ones). Contrast Track J. O2 order-zero [a, J b* J^{-1}] = 0 for all a,b in A_F. O3 order-one [[D_F,a], J b* J^{-1}] = 0 for the Yukawa D_F, and its FAILURE for a generic admissible D_F -- so order-one SELECTS the Yukawa structure (it is a genuine constraint, not an identity). O4 the KO-6 sign of the finite real structure (eps = +1), consistent. Honest residual (the PST-specific open piece): this uses the CHIRAL representation (H on L only), which is the CCM input. Track J showed the naive substrate ladder gives instead a vector-like SU(2). So the remaining question is whether the SUBSTRATE furnishes the chiral representation (equiv. a substrate D_F satisfying order-one with it), not whether chirality is compatible with the framework -- it is, as verified here. Run: python3 computation_07.py """ import numpy as np SEP = "=" * 78 def hdr(s): print(f"\n{SEP}\n {s}\n{SEP}") def comm(A, B): return A @ B - B @ A print(SEP) print(" PST Computation 7 — chirality and the order-one condition (Stage 6)") print(SEP) # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # Finite geometry: 8-dim lepton sector, one generation # basis 0..3 particles: nu_L, e_L, nu_R, e_R # basis 4..7 antiparticles: nu_L^c, e_L^c, nu_R^c, e_R^c # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # grading gamma_F: +1 on L particles, -1 on R particles; opposite on # antiparticles (so that J gamma = -gamma J, KO-6). gamma = np.diag([+1,+1,-1,-1, -1,-1,+1,+1]).astype(complex) # real structure J = S.K (S swaps particle<->antiparticle blocks, K conj) S = np.zeros((8,8)) S[:4,4:] = np.eye(4); S[4:,:4] = np.eye(4) def conj_by_J(X): return S @ np.conj(X) @ S # J X J^{-1} # J^2 = +1 since S real and S^2 = I: J2_plus = np.allclose(S @ S, np.eye(8)) # quaternion basis as 2x2 matrices (H -> SU(2) form) H1 = np.eye(2, dtype=complex) Hi = np.array([[1j,0],[0,-1j]], dtype=complex) Hj = np.array([[0,1],[-1,0]], dtype=complex) Hk = np.array([[0,1j],[1j,0]], dtype=complex) Z2 = np.zeros((2,2), dtype=complex) def rho(lam, q): """Representation of A_F element (lam in C, q in H as 2x2) on H_F. Particles: H acts on the L doublet (nu_L,e_L); C acts on R singlets (nu_R<-lam, e_R<-conj(lam)). Antiparticles (no colour): scalar lam.""" P = np.zeros((4,4), dtype=complex) P[:2,:2] = q P[2,2] = lam P[3,3] = np.conj(lam) AP = lam * np.eye(4, dtype=complex) out = np.zeros((8,8), dtype=complex) out[:4,:4] = P; out[4:,4:] = AP return out # spanning set of A_F = C (+) H AF = [(1+0j, Z2), (1j, Z2), (0j, H1), (0j, Hi), (0j, Hj), (0j, Hk)] # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # §1. Even representation; chiral SU(2)_L (H acts on L only) # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── hdr("§1 — even representation; chiral SU(2)_L from H on left-handed only") even = all(np.allclose(comm(gamma, rho(l,q)), 0) for (l,q) in AF) print(f" [gamma_F, A_F] = 0 (even triple): {even}") # the su(2) generators are rho(0, imaginary quaternion); check they are # supported on left-handed particles (idx 0,1) and annihilate the rest. P_L = np.diag([1,1,0,0, 0,0,0,0]).astype(complex) # left-handed particles su2_gens = [rho(0j, Hi), rho(0j, Hj), rho(0j, Hk)] chiral = all(np.allclose(G, P_L @ G @ P_L) for G in su2_gens) annihilates_R = all(np.allclose(G[2:4,2:4], 0) for G in su2_gens) print(f" SU(2)_L generators supported on LEFT-handed subspace only: {chiral}") print(f" SU(2)_L annihilates right-handed states (weak singlets): {annihilates_R}") print(" => chiral SU(2)_L by representation (contrast Track J's vector-like") print(" / chirality-mixing ladder SU(2)).") # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # §2. Order-zero # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── hdr("§2 — order-zero: [a, J b* J^{-1}] = 0 for all a,b in A_F") def right(b_lam, b_q): bo_in = rho(b_lam, b_q).conj().T # b* return conj_by_J(bo_in) # J b* J^{-1} order0 = True for (la,qa) in AF: for (lb,qb) in AF: if not np.allclose(comm(rho(la,qa), right(lb,qb)), 0, atol=1e-9): order0 = False print(f" order-zero holds for all pairs: {order0}") # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # §3. Order-one: Yukawa D_F passes; generic D_F fails (selection) # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── hdr("§3 — order-one: Yukawa D_F satisfies it; a generic D_F does not") # Yukawa D_F: connects L<->R within particles (Dirac masses), J-mirrored on # antiparticles. y_nu, y_e arbitrary nonzero complex. y_nu, y_e = 0.7+0.2j, 1.3-0.4j M_p = np.zeros((4,4), dtype=complex) M_p[0,2] = y_nu; M_p[2,0] = np.conj(y_nu) # nu_L <-> nu_R M_p[1,3] = y_e; M_p[3,1] = np.conj(y_e) # e_L <-> e_R D_yuk = np.zeros((8,8), dtype=complex) D_yuk[:4,:4] = M_p D_yuk[4:,4:] = np.conj(M_p) # forces J D = D J (eps'=+1) # sanity: self-adjoint, gamma-odd, J-compatible print(f" Yukawa D_F self-adjoint: {np.allclose(D_yuk, D_yuk.conj().T)}; " f"gamma-odd: {np.allclose(gamma@D_yuk + D_yuk@gamma, 0)}; " f"J D = D J: {np.allclose(conj_by_J(D_yuk), D_yuk)}") def order_one_residual(D): worst = 0.0 for (la,qa) in AF: one_form = comm(D, rho(la,qa)) # [D, a] for (lb,qb) in AF: r = comm(one_form, right(lb,qb)) # [[D,a], J b* J^{-1}] worst = max(worst, np.max(np.abs(r))) return worst res_yuk = order_one_residual(D_yuk) print(f" order-one residual for Yukawa D_F: {res_yuk:.2e} " f"(=0 -> satisfies order-one)") # generic admissible D_F: random Hermitian, gamma-odd, J-symmetrised. rng = np.random.default_rng(6) R = rng.standard_normal((8,8)) + 1j*rng.standard_normal((8,8)) R = (R + R.conj().T)/2 R = (R - gamma@R@gamma)/2 # gamma-odd part R = (R + conj_by_J(R))/2 # J-compatible part res_gen = order_one_residual(R) print(f" order-one residual for generic D_F: {res_gen:.2e} " f"(!=0 -> fails order-one)") print(f" => order-one is a genuine constraint: it SELECTS the Yukawa form") print(f" ({res_yuk:.1e} vs {res_gen:.1e}).") # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # §4. KO-6 sign of the finite real structure # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── hdr("§4 — finite real structure sign (KO-6 consistency)") # eps = J^2: J = S K, J^2 = S conj(S) ... = S^2 = I -> +1 print(f" J^2 = +1: {J2_plus} (KO-6 has eps = +1)") print(f" J gamma = -gamma J: " f"{np.allclose(conj_by_J(gamma), -gamma)} (KO-6 has eps'' = -1)") # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── # §5. Verdict # ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── hdr("§5 — Stage 6 verdict") print(f""" Verified on the explicit one-generation lepton finite geometry: - even representation [gamma,A_F]=0; and SU(2)_L (the H-action) is CHIRAL: supported on left-handed particles, annihilating the right-handed singlets ({chiral and annihilates_R}). This is the genuine chiral SU(2)_L, in contrast to Track J's vector-like / chirality-mixing ladder SU(2). - order-zero holds ({order0}). - order-one is SATISFIED by the Yukawa D_F (residual {res_yuk:.1e}) and FAILS for a generic admissible D_F (residual {res_gen:.1e}), so the order-one condition selects the Yukawa form. This is exactly the CCM mechanism by which the matter Dirac operator is fixed. - KO-6 signs (eps,eps'') = (+1,-1) consistent. So chirality is FULLY COMPATIBLE with the framework, and within it the chiral SU(2)_L plus the Yukawa structure follow from the chiral representation + order-one. Track J's reduction is realised concretely here: PST supplies A_F and KO-6, and order-one selects the Yukawa D_F. The honest residual (the one genuine open piece of the matter sector): This construction uses the CHIRAL representation (H on left-handed doublets only), which is the CCM input. Track J showed the naive substrate LADDER instead furnishes a vector-like SU(2). So the remaining question is whether the SUBSTRATE produces the chiral representation (equivalently, a substrate-derived D_F satisfying order-one with it), rather than the vector-like ladder. That is now the single sharp open problem of the matter sector: not 'is chirality possible' (yes, shown here) but 'does the substrate select the chiral bimodule'. Stage 6 outcome: chirality compatible and mechanised within the framework; the open piece reduced to one sharp question (substrate -> chiral bimodule), consistent with and sharper than the Track J CCM reduction. """)