Submitted:
26 May 2026
Posted:
26 May 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Motivation
1.2. Strategy
- 1.
- Full GTD expansion. After substituting the bosonic–fermionic decomposition into the fundamental single-STM-atom Lagrangian, the action splits naturally into three pieces,where is purely bosonic, contains the boson–fermion cross terms, and is bifermionic.
- 2.
-
Bosonic spectral sector. The bosonic piece is organized by the full normalized bosonic variablewithThe assembled quaternionic leaf operators and use only the nonzero imaginary quaternionic directions. The bosonic dotted zeroth quaternionic modes therefore supply the two branch-resolved scalar/Higgs seeds rather than part of the GTD Dirac operator itself. The quantity is dimensionless; the corresponding physical Dirac operator is , of dimension . The dimensionless cutoff used in the normalized spectral formulas is .
- 3.
- Conditional reduction of the fermionic and scalar sectors. Under an explicit localization hypothesis, the cross sector is rewritten as a sesquilinear pairing of operator-valued Dirac-mode coefficients. The bifermionic sector is rewritten as a bilinear seed which, after coarse-graining, generates an effective quartic scalar channel whose auxiliary-field completion yields the Higgs bridge field. These steps are consistency checks carried out under stated hypotheses, not full dynamical derivations.
- 4.
- BF-to-Dirac reduction on the leaf. The Wesley–Singh–Isidro BF mechanism is used at the principal-symbol level to relate the six-dimensional BF variables to a four-dimensional tetrad and spin connection on each leaf, and hence to the curved leafwise Dirac operator entering the almost-commutative geometry.
- 5.
- Low-energy action. The bosonic spectral action is then expanded by the standard Seeley–DeWitt machinery, while the cross-sector reduction supplies the fermionic pairing . In this way gravity, gauge fields, the Higgs sector, and the fermionic action are traced back to distinct parts of the same GTD Lagrangian.
- 6.
- Reverse-engineering consistency check. Starting from the assembled low-energy spectral action, one can rewrite the theory in Dirac spectral variables, promote the bosonic spectral datum and the fermionic mode coefficients to matrix-valued pre-geometric variables in the spirit of trace dynamics, and lift the continuum point label to split bioctonionic STM coordinates. Under these assumptions the minimal bilinear inverse lift recovers the single-STM-atom GTD action as a natural inverse ansatz.
1.2.0.1. Conventions for normalized and physical operators.
1.3. Key Assumptions and Status of the Construction
- Localization assumed. Spontaneous localization of STM atoms has occurred, so we work with the classical (post-localization) action. The sum over many localized atoms reconstructs the spectral action .
- Euclidean signature. We work in Euclidean signature on the six-dimensional base, then Wick-rotate the two emergent four-dimensional spacetimes.
- Six- to four-dimensional reduction. The Wesley–Singh–Isidro BF mechanism [9] provides the dynamical reduction from the six-dimensional base to two overlapping four-dimensional leaves with Lorentz symmetry.
- Single atom as local building block. The GTD action for a single STM atom is taken as the elementary local block. After spontaneous localization, summing over many STM atoms reconstructs the bosonic spectral trace, while the same sectorwise decomposition into , , and pieces is assumed to survive in the effective low-energy description.
1.3.0.2. Additional Working Hypotheses (H1)–(H6)
1.3.0.3. Scope of the Main Text vs. Appendix D
1.4. Relation to Prior Work
1.5. Anticipated Spontaneous Localization Mechanism
1.6. Broader Overview of the Octonionic Program
2. The Fundamental GTD LAGRANGIAN
2.1. Action for a Single STM Atom
2.2. Single-STM Connes-Time Action and the Emergence of the Classical Spacetime Action
2.3. Bosonic–Fermionic Decomposition
2.4. Decomposition on Split Bioctonionic Space
3. Expanding the GTD Lagrangian and Assembling the Spectral Data
3.0.0.4. Compact Operator Dictionary
3.1. The GTD Dirac Operator
3.1.0.5. Why the Dirac Operator Is Naturally a Split-Biquaternionic Gradient
3.2. Full Sectorwise Expansion of the GTD Lagrangian
3.3. Bosonic Sector and the Quadratic Spectral Functional
3.4. Cross Terms and the Fermionic Pairing
3.4.0.6. Conditional Reduction of the Fermionic Sector
3.5. Bifermionic Terms and the Scalar Bridge Field
3.6. From the Full GTD Expansion to the Low-Energy Action
4. Heat-Kernel Expansion of the Bosonic Spectral Action
4.1. Product Geometry and Dimensional Reduction
4.1.0.7. BF-to-Dirac Principal-Symbol Map
4.2. The Seeley–DeWitt Expansion
4.3. The Coefficient: Cosmological Constant
4.4. The Coefficient: Einstein–Hilbert Action and Higgs Mass
4.5. The Coefficient: Yang–Mills, Higgs Quartic, and Gravitational Corrections
5. The Two Four-Dimensional Spacetimes and New Forces
5.1. The Six-Dimensional Base and Its Decomposition
5.2. Forces on Each Leaf
5.2.0.8. Left Branch /
5.2.0.9. Right Branch /
5.2.0.10. From the Mixed Terms
5.3. Gauge–Gravity Duality
5.4. Symmetry Bookkeeping After Trinification
- 1.
- the leafwise quaternionic sectors carried by the assembled operators and , associated with and respectively;
- 2.
- the internal octonionic sectors carried by and , associated with and respectively.
6. The Fermionic Sector and the Exceptional Jordan Algebra
6.1. Fermionic Action from the GTD Lagrangian
6.2. Octonionic Internal Directions and the Observability of Color
6.3. Three Generations from the Symmetry
6.4. The Dirac Equation and the Jordan-Algebra Mass Matrix
- the three eigenvalues of the Jordan matrix correspond to the three fermion generations,
- the eigenvalue spectrum with is fixed by the algebra,
- the specific mass ratios follow from the Clebsch–Gordan factors in the representation of flavour .
6.5. Three-Generation Fermionic Lagrangian
7. The Higgs Sector
7.1. The Scalar Bridge Field and the Broken-Phase Multiplets
7.2. Broader Interpretation of the Higgs Sector
7.2.0.11. A conditional no-go for microscopic 288-closure in the Hermitian bifermionic seed.
7.3. Composite Origin from Bifermionic Terms
7.4. Effective Higgs Lagrangian
8. The Weak Mixing Angle
9. The Candidate Low-Energy Lagrangian
9.1. Collecting All Terms
9.2. Parameter Dictionary
10. Reverse-Engineering the GTD Action from the Low-Energy Spectral Data
10.1. Spectral Variables of the Low-Energy Action
10.2. Trace-Dynamical Lift of the Bosonic Spectral Data
10.3. Fermionic Mode Coefficients and the Odd GTD Variables
10.4. Reconstructing the Single-STM-Atom Action
10.4.0.12. Why the Single-STM-Atom Lagrangian Fixes the Classical Local Lagrangian
10.5. Status of the Reverse-Engineering Argument
- 1.
- it explains why the GTD action is trace-valued and bilinear in the pre-geometric variables,
- 2.
- it clarifies why bosonic spectral eigenvalues and fermionic mode coefficients enter differently in the pre-localized theory,
- 3.
- it shows that the split bioctonionic bookkeeping is compatible with the sectorwise decomposition of the low-energy action into bosonic, fermionic, and scalar channels.
11. Open Steps
11.1. What Is Established Here
- 1.
- Full sectorwise expansion of the GTD single-STM-atom Lagrangian into bosonic, cross, and bifermionic pieces , , and (Section 3).
- 2.
- Bosonic spectral identification of with the quadratic bosonic functional associated with the vector/differential part of the low-energy Dirac operator, together with the regulator analysis needed to promote it to a genuine spectral action (Sections 3 and Appendix B).
- 3.
- Sectorwise assembly rule for the completed almost-commutative operator : fixes the vector/differential part, fixes the fermionic pairing, and fixes the finite/internal scalar data (Sections 3, 6, and 7).
- 4.
- Representation-theoretic checks of the effective arrows: the localization map is now shown to respect the lepton/quark gauge representations, and the composite scalar channel is shown to contain the color-singlet electroweak doublets with hypercharges expected of the Higgs bridge, together with NJL mean-field estimates of the critical couplings (Sections 3, 6, and 7).
- 5.
- Heat-kernel expansion yielding , , and together with explicit parameter identifications for Newton’s constant, the cosmological constant, and gauge couplings, plus structural scalar-sector relations tied to the finite Dirac operator (Section 4).
- 6.
- Candidate low-energy Lagrangian including Standard Model + gravity + two new forces + an effective two-scalar sector + three fermion generations (Section 9).
- 7.
- Parameter dictionary relating all physical constants to , , and the cutoff moments (Section 9.2).
- 8.
- Reverse-engineering consistency check showing that the assembled low-energy spectral action admits a minimal bilinear trace-dynamical lift whose algebraic form matches the single-STM-atom GTD action on split bioctonionic space (Section 10).
11.2. Remaining Computations
11.2.1. Explicit Seeley–DeWitt Coefficients for the Internal Triple
11.2.2. Renormalization-Group Running with the New Forces
11.2.3. Detailed Higgs Potential from Bifermionic Terms
11.2.4. The Wesley–Singh–Isidro Mechanism in Detail
11.2.5. Determination of , , and
11.2.6. Neutrino Masses and the Seesaw Mechanism
11.2.7. Verification of Mass-Ratio Predictions
11.2.8. The 288 Unaccounted Degrees of Freedom of the Theory
11.3. Assessment
- 1.
- derive the candidate -compatible finite spectral triple, together with its finite traces, uniquely from the full exceptional/nonassociative GTD construction rather than postulate its minimal associative shadow,
- 2.
- derive the spectral cutoff profile and the moments dynamically from GTD localization/ coarse-graining rather than select a phenomenologically convenient regulator family,
- 3.
- specify the many-STM interaction, correlation, or entanglement mechanism needed to justify the passage from a single localized STM atom to the universe action.
12. Phenomenological Implications
12.1. Electroweak-Scale Matching with Fundamental G
12.2. CKM, PMNS, and Neutrino Masses After the Present Paper
- 1.
- write the explicit finite Dirac operator with separate up, down, charged-lepton, and neutrino Yukawa blocks consistent with the data;
- 2.
- derive the Higgs-bridge normalization and the right-sector breaking pattern;
- 3.
- evaluate the CKM and PMNS matrices at the electroweak matching scale ;
- 4.
- only then include the indirect dependence on through scalar normalization and threshold/RG effects.
12.3. Predictive Signatures
12.3.0.1. Two-Higgs Structure
12.3.0.2. Gauge-Coupling Structure:
12.3.0.3. Fermion Mass Ratios and CP-Violating Phases
12.3.0.4. Neutrino Mass Ordering and the Seesaw Scale
12.3.0.5. Dark Sector Signatures
13. Conclusions and Outlook
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Use of Artificial Intelligence
Appendix A. A Candidate E 6 -Compatible Finite Spectral Triple and the Finite Traces
Appendix A.1. Finite Data
Appendix A.2. Branchwise Trinification and the Low-Energy Truncation
Appendix A.3. Finite Dirac Operator
Appendix A.4. Finite Traces Entering the Heat-Kernel Coefficients
Appendix B. Regularizing the GTD Bosonic Quadratic Functional into a Genuine Spectral Action
Appendix B.1. From the Bare Quadratic Trace to a Smooth Cutoff
Appendix B.2. A Simple Regulator Family
Appendix B.3. Relation to the Parameters in the Main Text
Appendix C. Operator Dictionary and Exact Reassembly of the Single-STM Action
Appendix C.1. Exact Reassembly of the GTD Action
Appendix C.2. Dictionary of Dirac-Type Operators and Scalar Data
| Symbol | Dimension | Origin | Role in the derivation |
| Symbol | Dimension | Origin | Role in the derivation |
| dimensionless | full normalized bosonic GTD variable | splits as inside the single-STM action | |
| dimensionless | normalized GTD Dirac variable | packages the quaternionic leaf operator together with the non-scalar octonionic vector/gauge fluctuation | |
| physical GTD Dirac operator | physical operator compared with the non-commutative-geometry Dirac operator | ||
| left bosonic dotted zeroth-mode seed | second-Higgs antecedent extracted from | ||
| right bosonic dotted zeroth-mode seed | SM-like Higgs antecedent extracted from | ||
| BF-reduced leafwise Dirac operator | curved four-dimensional differential operator on the emergent leaf | ||
| localized non-scalar octonionic bosonic sector | vector/gauge fluctuation on the four-dimensional leaf | ||
| bosonic differential-plus-vector operator entering the quadratic spectral precursor | |||
| dimensionless odd variable | normalized fermionic GTD Dirac variable | unified pre-localized fermionic variable | |
| finite/internal Dirac operator | carries Yukawa and Majorana data in the almost-commutative geometry; not altered by the bosonic zeroth-mode split | ||
| auxiliary-field completion of the localized channel | composite/off-diagonal scalar bridge entering the finite fluctuation | ||
| completed almost-commutative operator controlling the low-energy action | |||
| dimensionless | normalized counterpart of | operator appearing in the normalized bosonic spectral action |
Appendix D. A Possible Pre-Breaking Nonassociative, Jordan, and Phase-Space-like Scaffold
Appendix D.1. The Split-Bioctonionic Scaffold Before Symmetry Breaking
Appendix D.2. A Candidate 7D and (7,7) Dirac-Type Structure
Appendix D.3. The Pre-Breaking Internal Sector as a Jordan/Nonassociative Background
Appendix D.4. Dotted/Undotted Polarization and the Limited Role of Metaplectic Geometry
Appendix D.5. The Bifermionic Seed as a Microscopic Higgs Reservoir
Appendix D.6. How the Pre-Breaking Scaffold May Reduce to the Broken-Phase Geometry
- 1.
- a split-biquaternionic differential operator on a base;
- 2.
- two leafwise four-dimensional descendants and ;
- 3.
- a branchwise -motivated internal/family sector whose observed-leaf associative shadow is encoded by Appendix A;
- 4.
- and branchwise bosonic scalar antecedents together with a composite bifermionic bridge.
- 1.
- symmetry breaking selects a preferred quaternionic subalgebra inside each octonionic branch, so that differential directions aligned with this subalgebra survive as leafwise Clifford directions while complementary octonionic directions are reinterpreted as internal vector/gauge data;
- 2.
- the BF mechanism then reduces the effective differential structure to the six-dimensional operator and thence to the two overlapping four-dimensional leaves [9];
- 3.
- the Jordan/nonassociative internal background reduces to the observed-leaf associative finite geometry of Appendix A, with family structure retained through ;
- 4.
- localization of the many-STM ensemble then yields the classical bundle/geometry whose effective action is described by the spectral-action analysis of the main text [14].
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| Ingredient | Status | Reference / Section |
|---|---|---|
| GTD action as starting point | Imported | [1,2] |
| symmetry of fundamental Lagrangian | Imported | [7,8] |
| Split bioctonionic scaffolding | Imported | [10] |
| Six- to four-dimensional BF reduction | Imported | [9] |
| Spectral action principle | Imported | [5,6] |
| Exceptional Jordan eigenvalue data and charged-fermion mass ratios | Imported | [11,12] |
| // sectorwise decomposition of | Derived here | Section 3.2 |
| GTD Dirac operator identified with bosonic differential part | Derived here | Section 3.1 |
| Sectorwise spectral assembly rule for | Derived here | Sections 3, 6, 7 |
| Principal-symbol BF → leafwise Dirac link | Derived here | Section 5 |
| Heat-kernel , , in present setup | Derived here (standard methodology) | Section 4 |
| Candidate -compatible finite spectral triple | Proposed here | Appendix A |
| Smooth regulator family with explicit | Constructed here | Appendix B |
| Visible -channel quantum-number check (color-singlet doublets, ) | Derived here | Sections 3, 6 |
| NJL mean-field critical-coupling formulas | Derived here | Section 6 |
| Reverse-engineering bilinear lift to bioctonionic STM | Derived here | Section 10 |
| (H1) Explicit localization map preserving lepton/quark representations | Working hypothesis | Section 3, used in 6 |
| (H2) projection isolates the visible scalar bridge channel | Working hypothesis | Section 7 |
| (H3) Localization/coarse-graining generates the attractive quartic channel | Working hypothesis | Section 7 |
| (H4) Associative shadow suffices for the observed-leaf finite geometry | Working hypothesis | Appendix A; see also Section 1.4 |
| (H5) Broken-phase support factors connect bare spectral coupling to visible couplings | Working hypothesis | Section 6.1 |
| (H6) Auxiliary-field (Hubbard–Stratonovich) completion of the quartic channel | Standard technique applied | Section 7 |
| Pre-breaking nonassociative scaffold | Programmatic look-ahead | Appendix D |
| GTD piece | Lagrangian role | Symmetry factor | Chiral action |
|---|---|---|---|
| internal octonionic gauge sector | vector-like on quark color indices | ||
| internal octonionic gauge sector | vector-like hidden/right sector | ||
| left-leaf quaternionic sector | acts on left-chiral electroweak multiplets | ||
| right-leaf quaternionic sector | acts on right sector before symmetry breaking; geometric branch gives gravity after BF reduction | ||
| or | bosonic dotted zeroth mode / scalar seed | Higgs/scalar sector | does not act as a spacetime derivative; feeds the effective scalar fluctuation |
| dotted fermionic / leptonic sector | on the left branch, on the right branch | acts on lepton multiplets with both left- and right-handed pieces present | |
| undotted fermionic / quark sector | on the left branch, on the right branch | acts on quark multiplets with both left- and right-handed pieces present | |
| mixed quaternionic–octonionic terms | gravi-weak / gauge bridges | does not by itself generate Yukawa masses | |
| or bosonized | Higgs / Yukawa sector | off-diagonal under left–right finite blocks | mixes and ; assembled together with |
| Physical quantity | GTD expression |
|---|---|
| Dimensionless spectral cutoff | in normalized variables, with physical cutoff |
| Physical matching scale | set by localization / breaking; in the present scenario –TeV and is an emergent transition scale rather than a new fundamental gravitational cutoff |
| Newton constant | Microscopically with ; equivalently, the coefficient of R in the localized four-dimensional action satisfies |
| Cosmological constant | proportional to |
| Common spectral gauge coefficient | |
| spectral coefficient | |
| matched low-energy coupling | |
| spectral coefficient | |
| spectral coefficient | |
| Fine-structure constant | in the simplest visible-sector normalization; broken-phase support gives and hence |
| Scalar mass parameter | after scalar normalization |
| Scalar quartic | |
| Gravi-gluon bare coefficient | |
| Weak mixing angle (geometric matching value) | |
| Yukawa couplings | determined by the eigenvalues of and their embedding in the finite Dirac operator |
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