Submitted:
19 January 2026
Posted:
21 January 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
Organization
1. Introduction: AQFTs
- 1.
- Objects: quadruples where: is a nonempty (smooth paracompact globally hyperbolic Lorentzian) spacetime of spacetime dimension m with at most finitely many connected components is a choice of orientation is a choice of time-orientation
- 2.
- Morphisms: smooth isometric embeddings, preserving both orientations, with causally convex image
2. Causal Sets
- (transitivity):
- (local finiteness) for all with , the Alexandrov intervalis finite.
- (irreflexivity) .
2.1. Past-Step Modalities and Factorial Damping
Main result: finite propagation, covariance, and truncation
- 1.
-
(Finite propagation / causal support). For every and every function ,whereand is the number of link-chains of length n from y to x. In particular, unless y lies in the causal past of x.
- 2.
-
(Polynomiality on finite regions). If , then on I (equivalently, B is nilpotent), henceis a finite sum.
- 3.
- (Discrete covariance). If is an order-automorphism (a poset automorphism), and is the induced action on functions, then
- , the previously possible events11;
- , the future-possible events.
2.2. Locally Covariant Nets on Causal Sets
2.2.1. Nets on Causal Sets
2.2.2. Discrete Haag–Kastler Axioms
Isotony.
Einstein causality.
Time-slice axiom (discrete).
2.2.3. Cauchy Slices and the Necessary Present
- (i) -algebras. A canonical choice is to take to be the category of unital -algebras with injective *-homomorphisms. In this case, is interpreted as the algebra of bounded observables measurable within the Alexandrov interval I, and isotony is realized as -subalgebra inclusion. This choice aligns most closely with the Haag–Kastler framework and ensures the existence of well-behaved state spaces.
- (ii) von Neumann algebras. Alternatively, one may assign to each interval I a von Neumann algebra , obtained as the weak closure of a corresponding -algebra in a chosen representation. In this setting, causal propagation along the net admits a natural modular-theoretic interpretation, and the discrete propagator may be compared with Tomita–Takesaki modular flows [4].
- (iii) Quasilocal algebra. The global algebrais naturally interpreted as the quasilocal algebra of the theory, where the closure is taken in the norm topology. Subalgebras associated with slices such as or then serve as candidates for initial-data algebras, from which the full net may be reconstructed via causal propagation.
-
(iv) Subalgebras and localization. For any causally convex subset , the associated algebra should be understood as the inductive limit of the algebras over all Alexandrov intervals . This ensures that localization is stable under refinement of the causal domain and is compatible with the discrete time-slice axiom.In all cases, the causal set structure provides a canonical notion of locality, while the choice of algebraic category determines the analytical and representational content of the theory. The framework is therefore flexible enough to accommodate both kinematical constructions and dynamical state-selection schemes.
3. Dynamical and Other Aspects of Causets
4. Future Work
4.1. Deepening the Modal Structure of Causet Nets
- define a modal enrichment of (e.g. by adding accessibility morphisms between intervals determined by admissible slices);
- impose compatibility conditions between the modal operators and the algebra maps (so that modal restriction/extension is functorial);
- study whether the propagator intertwines modal refinement, i.e. whether it acts naturally on modalized subalgebras associated to slices such as .
4.2. Dynamics via Sheaf-Localization and Gauge Data
- represent bounded regions by finitary -posets and assign incidence algebras ;
- organize these assignments as a sheaf (or stack) over refinements of regions, so that restriction maps become part of the data;
- introduce discrete connection-like transport between overlaps, and compare it against the intrinsic transport encoded by .
4.3. Continuum Limits, Reconstruction, and Comparison to Haag–Kastler Axioms
- a discrete additivity condition (generation of from subinterval algebras) and its stability under refinement;
- an explicit covariance statement for embeddings of finite intervals (compatible with Proposition 2.1(3));
- representation-theoretic input: existence of physically meaningful states and a causet analogue of the spectrum condition.
Closing Remarks
Appendix A. A Toy Computation on a Diamond Causet
Appendix A.1. The Diamond Poset and Its Adjacency Operator
Appendix A.2. The Factorial Propagator
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| 1 | The properties of isotony and Einstein locality (the latter of which states that all causally disjoint spacetime regions must commute) together form part of the Haag–Kastler axioms [13]. In the Haag-Kastler framework, an assignment of an “algebra of observables" to each point via is known as a net. They are technically “precosheaves," (covariant functors on a region poset) while the nets mathematicians may be more familiar with are commonly known as directed systems. For a modern treatment of Haag–Kastler, refer to [3]. |
| 2 | In general, however, diffeomorphisms (or for that matter, other purely geometric mappings) are not enough to describe the physics of massive particles [15]. |
| 3 | In standard physics notation, these would be denoted and . |
| 4 | “Connected components" should be read as Alexandrov intervals of the causets introduced in Definition (2.1). |
| 5 | Also known as Einstein locality or micro-causality |
| 6 | The first and third together imply acyclicity. Additional analytic input is required to obtain Reeh–Schlieder-type cyclicity/separating properties in a Hilbert space representation. |
| 7 | This is the version of causality discussed in [14], and it functions as a causet-version of Einstein causality. In sum, it states that “spectators" can be deleted, and thus the growth of a causet depends only upon events in the past lightcone. See 3. |
| 8 | In particular, writing as was done in [5] is suggestive but potentially misleading unless one explicitly declares it as notation for . |
| 9 | “Sprinkling" refers to a type of Poisson process in which a (random) filling of Planck-density populates underlying causal set, and thus the resulting manifold. One must be careful so as to ensure the density remains physical after a Lorentz boost, which will fail if the sprinkling is uniform. See [1] for an introduction to Poisson processes, and [8] for the common pitfalls. |
| 10 | The choice of chain is not unique in general; one may either fix a chain or sum over all such chains, depending on the physical interpretation. Discrete covariance [14] tells us that the chosen chain should “drop-out" of the final equations, much like the co-ordinate invariance of GR. |
| 11 | These are events compatible with the past but not selected as necessary. |
| 12 | Iteration of necessity is treated qualitatively via , while quantitative influence from n-step ancestors is encoded by . |
| 13 | We defer to [11] for information on the exact equivalence. |
| 14 | From the AQFT viewpoint, the graded noncommutative structure of provides a field-like enrichment of a bare causal order: it upgrades the relation-symbols into elements of a -algebra admitting coherent superposition, while the grading organizes these degrees of freedom into “0-forms” and higher “k-forms.” This is precisely the sort of additional geometric content one needs if the causet is to support dynamics beyond stochastic accretion, e.g. a notion of local differential response and (ultimately) gauge-covariant transport between local algebras. |
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