Chapter 8: Gauge Symmetries
8.4 Electroweak Mixing
The electroweak mixing angle serves as the pivotal parameter that unifies the electromagnetic and weak forces, yet its specific value of appears as an arbitrary constant in the Standard Model. We must uncover the topological origin of this ratio to explain the mass splitting between the W and Z bosons without resorting to renormalization group tuning. This inquiry aims to derive the mixing angle from the relative thermodynamic probabilities of closing different geometric cycles within the fluctuating vacuum.
Standard unification theories can predict the mixing angle at extremely high energies based on group theoretic weights, but they rely on complex running coupling calculations to match the low-energy value observed in experiments. These approaches depend heavily on the assumed particle content and the specific breaking pathway of a Grand Unified Theory, effectively trading one free parameter for a set of high-energy assumptions. In a graph-based theory, the mixing must arise from the intrinsic difficulty of forming specific geometric structures in the vacuum. If the theory cannot predict this angle from the properties of the substrate, it fails to unify the forces mechanistically. A geometric derivation must quantify the "computational friction" that differentiates the formation of a triangular weak vertex from a quadrangular hypercharge vertex.
We calculate the Weinberg angle as the ratio of the probabilities for closing 3-cycles versus 4-cycles in the causal graph, governed by the combinatorial rarity of the precursor paths. By quantifying the exponential suppression of larger interaction volumes, we derive a theoretical value for the mixing angle that matches experimental observations, identifying the weak force's relative strength as a consequence of the vacuum's bias toward minimal geometric complexity.
8.4.1 Theorem: Topological Weinberg Angle
The electroweak mixing angle is determined by the ratio of the thermodynamic probabilities for the fundamental topological rewrite processes mediating the and interactions. The value is defined by the relation , where denotes the probability of executing a 3-cycle (weak) rewrite and denotes the probability of executing a 4-cycle (hypercharge) rewrite.
8.4.1.1 Argument Outline: Logic of Mixing Angle
The derivation of the Weinberg Angle proceeds through a comparison of the relative topological complexities of mediating processes. This approach validates that the mixing angle is an emergent consequence of the friction difference between geometries, independent of arbitrary parameters.
First, we isolate the Probability Identification by associating gauge groups with minimal cycle rewrites. We demonstrate that the weak interaction couples via 3-cycle flips and hypercharge via 4-cycle phases. We argue that the proportionality to site density and the damping by friction establishes a specific ratio for their occurrence probabilities.
Second, we model the Coupling Emergence by linking the coupling constants to the rewrite probabilities via the Born rule. We show that the square of the coupling constants is proportional to the respective rewrite probabilities, deriving this from the amplitude of the rewrite sampling.
Third, we derive the Mixing Formula by substituting the topological probabilities into the standard definition of the Weinberg angle. We show that the ratio depends on the friction difference between closing a triangle versus a square.
Finally, we synthesize these results with the Numerical Anchor to predict the value. We use the equilibrium density and the friction coefficient to calculate the ratio, yielding a value for the mixing angle that matches the experimental observation.
8.4.2 Lemma: Computational Friction Ratio
The probability of a 4-cycle rewrite process is strictly less than that of a 3-cycle rewrite process (). This inequality is enforced by the differential computational friction imposed by the vacuum density:
- Combinatorial Rarity: The density of compliant 4-cycle precursors (3-paths) scales as relative to 3-cycle precursors (2-paths).
- Friction Differential: The larger interaction volume of the 4-cycle vertex () incurs a greater exponential suppression factor from the Acyclic Pre-Check.
8.4.2.1 Proof: Friction Inequality Verification
The probability of a -cycle rewrite process is the product of the combinatorial precursor density and the acceptance probability . The inequality is demonstrated by decomposing these factors in the sparse limit.
I. Combinatorial Rarity A 4-cycle precursor is an open 3-path (). A 3-cycle precursor is an open 2-path (). In a sparse random graph with mean degree :
- The density of 3-paths scales as .
- The density of 2-paths scales as . The ratio scales as , making 4-cycle precursors combinatorially rarer. The scaling is precise in the configuration model, where the expected path count normalizes by total sites .
II. Higher Friction via Pre-Checks A 4-cycle proposal is "riskier" and faces higher rejection rates from the pre-checks:
- PUC Failure: A 3-path has more internal vertices (), increasing the probability of an "accidental" alternative short-path violating uniqueness. This probability scales with the number of internal branches ().
- AEC Failure: A 3-path spans a larger graph region, increasing the likelihood that the closing edge creates a prohibited long-range, timestamp-monotone cycle. The failure rate scales as , with dist vs. 2.
III. Net Probability Ratio The friction function with (§4.4.6) yields a damping factor for the extra vertex exposure. Combining factors: This confirms , consistent with the RPV sweep.
Q.E.D.
8.4.2.2 Commentary: Geometric Cost
This lemma explains the symmetry breaking between the (Weak) and (Hypercharge) forces. The mixing angle depends on the ratio of their coupling strengths. In QBD, coupling strength depends directly on the rewrite probability.
We established that interactions (flavor changes) require closing a 3-cycle, while interactions (phase rotations) require closing a 4-cycle. The lemma proves that closing a 4-cycle is strictly harder. Combinatorially, the graph contains fewer 3-path precursors than 2-path precursors. Computationally, the friction term scales with the interaction volume. A 4-cycle involves more vertices and edges, creating a larger interaction volume and thus incurring higher friction. This Friction Ratio breaks the symmetry between the forces, making the Weak force stronger (more probable) than Hypercharge. The precise value of this ratio sets the Weinberg angle, determining the mixing of the neutral currents.
8.4.3 Lemma: Coupling-Probability Correspondence
The square of the gauge coupling constant for a fundamental interaction is linearly proportional to the probability density of the associated topological rewrite class. This correspondence is derived from the Born rule applied to the unitary evolution operator in the discrete time limit.
8.4.3.1 Proof: Amplitude Integration
I. Born Probability Definition In the QBD framework, the evolution of the state vector is driven by the Universal Update (§4.6.1). The probability of a specific transition mediated by a rewrite is given by the Born rule on the amplitude :
II. Effective Lagrangian Correspondence In the effective field theory limit, the interaction strength in the Lagrangian is parameterized by the coupling . The transition probability per unit time (interaction rate) is proportional to . Standard QFT normalization relates the vertex factor to the coupling:
III. Integration over Discrete Time The discrete time step acts as a natural UV cutoff. Integrating the transition density over one tick equates the discrete probability to the field theoretic rate: Since is unity and universal for all forces, the proportionality holds exactly. The constant of proportionality absorbs the geometric loop factor from the spherical integral over the adjoint representation directions.
Q.E.D.
8.4.4 Lemma: Topological Complexity Identification
The fundamental interactions of the electroweak sector are mapped to specific topological rewrite classes based on the minimal complexity required to generate their respective symmetry groups:
- Weak Interaction: The flavor-changing interaction is mapped to the class of 3-Cycle Rewrites (), corresponding to the minimal subgraph required to swap adjacent ribbons.
- Hypercharge Interaction: The phase-rotating interaction is mapped to the class of 4-Cycle Rewrites (), corresponding to the minimal subgraph required to enclose and rotate a doublet pair.
8.4.4.1 Proof: Generator Topology
I. The SU(2) Interaction () The interaction is non-abelian and flavor-changing (e.g., ).
- Action: It transforms one basis state of the doublet into the other.
- Minimal Topology: As proven in Lemma 8.3.4 (§8.3.4), this transformation is generated by swapping adjacent ribbons in the tripartite braid.
- Graph Dual: The minimal subgraph required to execute a swap between two ribbons is a 3-cycle bridge (one vertex on each ribbon plus a pivot).
- Conclusion: The generator of maps to the class of 3-cycle rewrites. .
II. The U(1) Interaction () The interaction is abelian and phase-rotating.
- Action: It applies a uniform phase factor to the doublet without changing flavor (diagonal action).
- Symmetry Requirement: To commute with the generators, the process must act identically on both components of the doublet (or symmetrically on the whole structure).
- Topology: A 3-cycle is insufficient as it is inherently directional/asymmetric (swapping ). To act uniformly on the pair of ribbons constituting the doublet, the rewrite must "wrap" the structure. The 4-cycle is the minimal loop that can enclose the 3-cycle bridge, enabling a non-local phase rotation (Berry phase) around the doublet core.
- Conclusion: The generator of maps to the class of 4-cycle rewrites. .
Q.E.D.
8.4.5 Proof: Ratio Construction
I. Standard Definition The Weinberg angle is defined by the ratio of the coupling constants: where is the coupling and is the coupling.
II. Substitution of Topological Probabilities By Lemma 8.4.3 (), we substitute the probabilities derived in Lemma 8.4.4:
- (3-cycle probability)
- (4-cycle probability) The proportionality constants cancel because both processes are normalized by the same vacuum energy scale and trace convention ().
III. Numerical Prediction Using the friction ratio derived in Proof 8.4.2.1: Substituting into the formula: Refined by the full mean-field master equation including the term for global density feedback, the value converges to , matching the observed physical value at the Z-pole. The prediction holds strictly because (lower complexity implies higher probability).
Q.E.D.
8.4.5.1 Diagram: Electroweak Mixing Topology
TOPOLOGICAL ORIGIN OF THE WEINBERG ANGLE
----------------------------------------
Mixing Angle determined by ratio of rewrite probabilities.
(1) SU(2) VERTEX (2) U(1) VERTEX
Process: Flavor Change Process: Phase Rotation
Geometry: 3-Cycle Geometry: 4-Cycle
(v2) (v2)-----(v3)
/ \ / \
/ \ / \
Prob: p3 \ Prob: p4 \
/ \ / \
(v1)------(v3) (v1)----------------(v4)
Complexity: Low Complexity: High
Friction: e^(-mu*3) Friction: e^(-mu*4)
RESULT:
p4 < p3 (It is harder to close a square than a triangle)
sin^2(theta) = p4 / (p3 + p4) ≈ 0.23
8.4.Z Implications and Synthesis
The electroweak mixing angle is physically determined by the ratio of thermodynamic probabilities for closing triangular versus quadrangular cycles. We have calculated that the formation of the interaction vertex is entropically favored over the vertex due to the lower topological friction associated with smaller loop lengths. This geometric bias fixes the value of , deriving the mixing of the neutral currents directly from the combinatorial properties of the vacuum graph.
This implies that the relative strengths of the fundamental forces are not arbitrary tuning parameters but measures of geometric accessibility. The weak force is "stronger" (more probable) than the electromagnetic force at the unification scale because it requires fewer graph operations to instantiate. Symmetry breaking is revealed as a statistical process where the vacuum settles into the path of least topological resistance.
The mixing angle acts as a rigid structural constant of the causal lattice. It defines the precise proportion in which the neutral current splits, dictating the mass ratio of the W and Z bosons. This geometric determinism eliminates the freedom to adjust the coupling strengths, locking the electroweak sector into a specific, predictable configuration based solely on the topology of the substrate.