A Portal Special Presentation- Geometric Unity: A First Look: Difference between revisions

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<p>[02:06:44] Then in the mid 1970s [Martin Lewis] Perl finds the tau particle and we start to get panicked that we don't understand what's going on. One thing we can do is we could move these equations around a little bit and move the equation for the first generation back, and then we can start adding particles. Let's imagine that we could guess what particles we'd add.
<p>[02:06:44] Then in the mid 1970s [Martin Lewis] Perl finds the tau particle and we start to get panicked that we don't understand what's going on. One thing we can do is we could move these equations around a little bit and move the equation for the first generation back, and then we can start adding particles. Let's imagine that we could guess what particles we'd add.


<p>[02:07:10] We'd had a pseudo-generation of 16 particles. Spin three-halves, never before seen. Not necessarily super-partners, Rarita-Schwinger matter with familiar internal quantum numbers, but potentially so that they're flipped. So that matter looks like anti-matter to this generation. Then we add just for the heck of it, 144 spin one-half fermions, which contain a bunch of particles with familiar quantum numbers, but also some very exotic looking particles that nobody's ever seen before.
<p>[02:07:10] We'd had a pseudo-generation of 16 particles. Spin three-halves, never before seen. Not necessarily super-partners, Rarita-Schwinger matter with familiar internal quantum numbers, but potentially so that they're flipped. So that matter looks like anti-matter to this generation. Then we add just for the heck of it, 144 spin-one-half fermions, which contain a bunch of particles with familiar quantum numbers, but also some very exotic looking particles that nobody's ever seen before.


<p>[02:07:46] Now we start doing something different. We make an accusation. One of our generations isn't a regular generation. It's an impostor at low energy in a cooled state, potentially, it looks just the same as these other generations, but where are we somehow able to turn up the energy? Imagine that it would unify differently with this new matter that we've posited rather than simply unifying onto itself. So two of the generations would unify unto themselves, but this third generation would fuse with the new particles that we've already added. We consolidate geometrically. We can add some zero-th order terms, and we imagine that there is an elliptic complex that would govern the state of affairs.
<p>[02:07:46] Now we start doing something different. We make an accusation. One of our generations isn't a regular generation. It's an impostor at low energy in a cooled state, potentially, it looks just the same as these other generations, but where are we somehow able to turn up the energy? Imagine that it would unify differently with this new matter that we've posited rather than simply unifying onto itself. So two of the generations would unify unto themselves, but this third generation would fuse with the new particles that we've already added. We consolidate geometrically. We can add some zero-th order terms, and we imagine that there is an elliptic complex that would govern the state of affairs.
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