In contemporary physical theories, the word
spacetime refers to a
Lorentzian manifold (M,g). This means that spacetime is a
set of points enriched by topological and geometric structures. In the context of causal fermion systems, spacetime does not need to have a manifold structure. Instead, spacetime M is a set of operators on a Hilbert space (a subset of \mathcal F). This implies additional inherent structures that correspond to and generalize usual objects on a spacetime manifold. For a causal fermion system (\mathcal H, \mathcal F, \rho), we define
spacetime M as the
support of the universal measure, : M := \text{supp} \, \rho \subset \mathcal{F}. With the
topology induced by \mathcal{F}, spacetime M is a
topological space.
Causal structure For x,y \in M, we denote the non-trivial eigenvalues of the operator x y (counting
algebraic multiplicities) by \lambda^{xy}_1, \ldots, \lambda^{xy}_{2n} \in {\mathbb{C}} . The points x and y are defined to be
spacelike separated if all the \lambda^{xy}_j have the same absolute value. They are
timelike separated if the \lambda^{xy}_j do not all have the same absolute value and are all real. In all other cases, the points x and y are
lightlike separated. This notion of causality fits together with the "causality" of the above causal action in the sense that if two spacetime points x,y \in M are space-like separated, then the Lagrangian {\mathcal{L}}(x,y) vanishes. This corresponds to the physical notion of
causality that spatially separated spacetime points do not interact. This causal structure is the reason for the notion "causal" in causal fermion system and causal action. Let \pi_x denote the orthogonal projection on the subspace S_x := x({\mathcal{H}}) \subset {\mathcal{H}}. Then the sign of the functional : i \text{Tr} \big( x\, y \, \pi_x \, \pi_y - y \, x \, \pi_y \, \pi_x) distinguishes the
future from the
past. In contrast to the structure of a
partially ordered set, the relation "lies in the future of" is in general not transitive. But it is transitive on the macroscopic scale in typical examples. which justify the name
projector.
Connection and curvature Being an operator from one spin space to another, the kernel of the fermionic projector gives relations between different spacetime points. This fact can be used to introduce a
spin connection :D_{x,y} \,:\, S_y \rightarrow S_x \quad \text{unitary}\,. The basic idea is to take a
polar decomposition of P(x,y). The construction becomes more involved by the fact that the spin connection should induce a corresponding
metric connection :\nabla_{x,y}\,:\, T_y \rightarrow T_x \quad \text{isometric}\,, where the tangent space T_x is a specific subspace of the linear operators on S_x endowed with a Lorentzian metric. The
spin curvature is defined as the
holonomy of the spin connection, :\mathfrak{R}(x,y,z) = D_{x,y} \,D_{y,z} \,D_{z,x} \,:\, S_x \rightarrow S_x\,. Similarly, the metric connection gives rise to
metric curvature. These geometric structures give rise to a proposal for a
quantum geometry.
The Euler–Lagrange equations and the linearized field equations A minimizer \rho of the causal action satisfies corresponding
Euler–Lagrange equations. In general terms, a surface layer integral is a double integral of the form : \int_\Omega \bigg( \int_{M \setminus \Omega} \cdots {\mathcal{L}}(x,y) \, d\rho(y) \bigg) \, d\rho(x) \, , where one variable is integrated over a subset \Omega \subset M, and the other variable is integrated over the complement of \Omega. It is possible to express the usual conservation laws for charge, energy, ... in terms of surface layer integrals. The corresponding conservation laws are a consequence of the Euler–Lagrange equations of the causal action principle and the linearized field equations. For the applications, the most important surface layer integrals are the
current integral \gamma^\Omega_\rho(\mathfrak{v}), the
symplectic form \sigma^\Omega_\rho(\mathfrak{u}, \mathfrak{v}), the
surface layer inner product \langle \mathfrak{u}, \mathfrak{v}\rangle^\Omega_\rho and the
nonlinear surface layer integral \gamma^\Omega(\tilde{\rho}, \rho).
Bosonic Fock space dynamics Based on the conservation laws for the above surface layer integrals, the dynamics of a causal fermion system as described by the Euler–Lagrange equations corresponding to the causal action principle can be rewritten as a linear, norm-preserving dynamics on the bosonic Fock space built up of solutions of the linearized field equations. This correspondence explains why the vectors in the particle space are to be interpreted as
fermions. It also motivates the name causal
fermion system. == Underlying physical principles ==