Axial torsion as a chirality filter: the mechanism
- Definitions / Notation used
- Main technical argument: axial torsion enters as an axial-vector coupling that splits chiral energies
If chirality is going to emerge rather than be imposed, something has to do the selecting. In this instantiation, that selector is not a grand-unified branching rule and not a Higgs choice. It is the axial torsion background coupled to an ambient spinor that the observer samples through \(\iota\).
Once \(Y\) carries a spinor bundle, a transport connection, and augmented torsion, there is a natural torsionful Dirac operator upstairs. The effective 4D operator is what the observer sees after restriction to \(\iota(X)\) and projection onto a normal Hermite mode.
Axial torsion couples with opposite sign to opposite 4D chiralities, so it behaves like a built-in spectral bias. Once the normal sector is organized in Hermite modes, that bias becomes concrete: the lowest viable pulled-back mode can be chiral because the other handedness is energetically pushed away.
Definitions / Notation used
- \(X=X^4\), \(Y=Y^{14}\), \(\iota:X\hookrightarrow Y\), and pullback \(\iota^\ast\).
- Along \(\iota(X)\):
$$ TY|_X \simeq TX \oplus N_\iota, $$
with indices \(\mu,\nu\) on \(TX\), indices \(a,b\) on \(N_\iota\), and indices \(M,N\) on \(Y\).
- The metric split is
$$ g_X := \iota^\ast g_Y, \qquad g_Y \simeq g_X \oplus \sigma(x)^2 \delta_{ab} n^a \otimes n^b. $$
- Spinors are native to \(Y\):
$$ \Psi \in \Gamma(Y,S_Y). $$
The observed restriction is
$$ \Psi_\iota := \Psi \circ \iota. $$
- \(A_0\) is the distinguished background connection.
- \(B_\omega\) is the transport connection determined by the gauge-rotated data.
- The augmented torsion is
$$ T := \eta - \varepsilon^{-1}d_{A_0}\varepsilon. $$
- \(c_Y\) denotes Clifford multiplication on \(Y\).
- The ambient torsionful Dirac operator is written schematically as
$$ \mathcal{D}_{Y,T} := c_Y\circ \nabla^{S_Y,T}_{B_\omega}. $$
Here \(\nabla^{S_Y,T}_{B_\omega}\) is the spinor covariant derivative induced by the transport connection together with augmented torsion.
- Local symbol used only here:
$$ S_\mu := (\iota^\ast T)^{\mathrm{ax}}_\mu. $$
This denotes the effective axial torsion one-form seen along \(X\), schematically extracted from the axial part of \(T\) after restriction.
Main technical argument: axial torsion enters as an axial-vector coupling that splits chiral energies
The mechanism begins with the ambient torsionful Dirac operator on \(Y\):
$$ \mathcal{D}_{Y,T} = c_Y\circ \nabla^{S_Y,T}_{B_\omega}. $$
In a local frame adapted to the immersion, the operator has the schematic decomposition
$$ \mathcal{D}_{Y,T} \sim \Gamma^\mu \nabla^{(A_0)}_\mu + \Gamma^a \nabla^{(N)}_a + \alpha\,\Gamma^\mu\Gamma^{\mathrm{ax}} S_\mu + \cdots . $$
Here:
- \(\Gamma^M\) are ambient Clifford matrices on \(Y\).
- \(\nabla^{(A_0)}_\mu\) is the connection seen along the \(X\) directions.
- \(\nabla^{(N)}_a\) is the normal-sector part of the spinor derivative.
- The axial torsion component contributes the term proportional to \(S_\mu\).
- The dots denote additional curvature, transport, or higher-mode terms not needed for the chirality-filter argument.
After restriction to \(\iota(X)\), the ambient Clifford structure decomposes into an observed 4D Clifford structure plus normal Clifford data. In the observed 4D sector, the axial torsion term takes the familiar form
$$ \gamma^\mu\gamma^5 S_\mu. $$
Now organize the normal sector in Hermite-Gaussian modes. For a low Hermite mode, write
$$ \Psi(x,n)=\phi_k(n)\otimes\psi_k(x). $$
Projecting the ambient operator onto the \(k\)-th normal mode gives the effective operator
$$ \mathcal{D}_{\mathrm{eff},k}\psi_k := \left\langle \phi_k, \iota^\ast(\mathcal{D}_{Y,T})(\phi_k\otimes\psi_k) \right\rangle_N . $$
Here \(\langle\cdot,\cdot\rangle_N\) denotes the normal Hermite-mode inner product.
Schematically, this gives
$$ \mathcal{D}_{\mathrm{eff},k}\psi_k \sim \gamma^\mu \nabla^{(A_0)}_\mu \psi_k + m_k \psi_k + \alpha \left(\gamma^\mu \gamma^5 S_\mu\right)\psi_k. $$
Here:
- \(\psi_k\) is the 4D spinor factor associated with the normal mode \(\phi_k\).
- \(m_k\) is the normal-mode contribution from the Hermite sector.
- The ground mode \(k=0\) has the lightest baseline contribution.
- \(S_\mu\) is the effective axial torsion one-form seen on \(X\).
- \(\alpha\) is a coupling coefficient fixed by normalization conventions in the spinor–torsion sector.
The important term is
$$ \alpha \gamma^\mu \gamma^5 S_\mu. $$
The factor \(\gamma^5\) means that opposite 4D chiralities see opposite signs. If we decompose
$$ \psi_k = \psi_{k,+} + \psi_{k,-}, \qquad \gamma^5 \psi_{k,\pm} = \pm \psi_{k,\pm}, $$
then the axial torsion term shifts the two sectors in opposite directions.
In a simple static intuition, one can summarize the chiral splitting as
$$ E_{k,\pm} \approx E_k \pm \alpha |S|, $$
where \(E_k\) is the baseline energy of the \(k\)-th normal mode and \(\pm\) labels the \(\gamma^5\) chirality.
This is the chirality filter.
The Hermite basis supplies a tower:
$$ E_0 < E_1 < E_2 < \cdots. $$
Axial torsion then splits each level into two chiral branches:
$$ E_{k,+} \qquad \text{and} \qquad E_{k,-}. $$
If the torsion background lowers one branch and raises the other, then the lowest pullback-stable state can be chiral even though the original ambient spinor \(\Psi\) was not Weyl.
That is the whole mechanism.
No Weyl projection is imposed on \(\Psi\). Instead, the background geometry changes the spectrum. One chiral sector remains energetically favored in the ground state; the other becomes heavy, unstable, or absent from the low-energy observed sector.
This also explains why axial torsion must be treated as non-perturbative here. If torsion were merely a small correction, it might not robustly select a chirality. But in this torsion-first ansatz, axial torsion is part of the background responsible for the existence of the chiral observed sector in the first place.
The immersion also matters. The observer does not see the full torsion field on \(Y\). The observer sees the effective torsion profile induced by pullback:
$$ \iota^\ast T. $$
The chirality filter is therefore controlled by the axial part of the torsion seen along \(\iota(X)\):
$$ S_\mu := (\iota^\ast T)^{\mathrm{ax}}_\mu. $$
So the selection is not abstract. It is tied to the actual immersed geometry of \(X\) inside \(Y\).
Assumptions vs Consequences
Definitional
The augmented torsion is
$$ T := \eta - \varepsilon^{-1}d_{A_0}\varepsilon. $$
Spinors are native to \(Y\):
$$ \Psi \in \Gamma(Y,S_Y). $$
The ambient spinor geometry supplies a torsionful Dirac operator:
$$ \mathcal{D}_{Y,T} = c_Y\circ \nabla^{S_Y,T}_{B_\omega}. $$
The observer sees the restricted spinor:
$$ \Psi_\iota=\Psi\circ\iota. $$
Ansatz
Axial torsion is present and non-perturbative.
The normal spinor sector is organized by Hermite-Gaussian modes:
$$ \Psi(x,n)=\phi_k(n)\otimes\psi_k(x). $$
The low-energy observed sector is dominated by low-\(k\) modes.
Consequence
The pulled-back, mode-projected effective Dirac operator is
$$ \mathcal{D}_{\mathrm{eff},k}\psi_k := \left\langle \phi_k, \iota^\ast(\mathcal{D}_{Y,T})(\phi_k\otimes\psi_k) \right\rangle_N . $$
For axial torsion, this operator contains an axial coupling:
$$ \alpha\left(\gamma^\mu\gamma^5 S_\mu\right). $$
This term splits opposite chiralities:
$$ E_{k,\pm}\approx E_k\pm \alpha |S|. $$
Therefore, the lowest pullback-stable observed mode can be chiral without imposing a Weyl condition on the ambient spinor.
Why this matters
- It gives a concrete dynamical meaning to “no Weyl imposed.”
- It identifies axial torsion as the filter that selects the observed chirality.
- It makes the Dirac operator part of the ambient geometry rather than an extra field-theory assumption on \(X\).
Key takeaway
Axial torsion biases the spectrum with opposite sign for opposite chiralities.
The observed ground state on \(X\) can therefore be chiral.
No Weyl condition is imposed on the ambient spinor on \(Y\).
The Dirac operator entering the argument is the effective shadow of the ambient torsionful operator
$$ \mathcal{D}_{Y,T} = c_Y\circ \nabla^{S_Y,T}_{B_\omega}. $$
Technical takeaway
$$ \Psi(x,n)=\phi_k(n)\otimes\psi_k(x), \qquad \Psi_\iota=\Psi\circ\iota. $$
$$ \mathcal{D}_{Y,T} = c_Y\circ \nabla^{S_Y,T}_{B_\omega}. $$
$$ \mathcal{D}_{\mathrm{eff},k}\psi_k := \left\langle \phi_k, \iota^\ast(\mathcal{D}_{Y,T})(\phi_k\otimes\psi_k) \right\rangle_N . $$
$$ \mathcal{D}_{\mathrm{eff},k}\psi_k \sim \gamma^\mu\nabla_\mu^{(A_0)}\psi_k + m_k\psi_k + \alpha(\gamma^\mu\gamma^5S_\mu)\psi_k. $$
$$ E_{k,\pm}\approx E_k\pm\alpha|S| \quad \Longrightarrow \quad \text{ground state selects one } \gamma^5 \text{ sector}. $$
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