Noncommutative standard model


In theoretical particle physics, the non-commutative Standard Model 104">



), is a model based on noncommutative geometry that unifies a modified form of general relativity with the Standard Model.
The model postulates that space-time is the product of a 4-dimensional compact spin manifold by a finite space. The full Lagrangian of the Standard model minimally coupled to gravity is obtained as pure gravity over that product space. It is therefore close in spirit to Kaluza-Klein theory but without the problem of massive tower of states.
The parameters of the model live at unification scale and physical predictions are obtained by running the parameters down through Renormalization.
It is worth stressing that it is more than a simple reformation of the Standard Model. For example, the scalar sector and the fermions representations are more constrained than in Effective field theory.

History

First ideas to use noncommutative geometry to particle physics appeared in 1988-89




, and were formalized a couple of years later by Alain Connes and John Lott in what is known as the Connes-Lott model


. The Connes-Lott model did not incorporate the gravitational field.
In 1997, Ali Chamseddine and Alain Connes published a new action principle, the Spectral Action

, that made possible to incorporate the gravitational field into the model. Nevertheless, it was quickly noted that the model suffered from the notorious fermion-doubling problem



and required neutrinos to be massless. One year later, experiments in Super-Kamiokande and Sudbury Neutrino Observatory began to show that solar and atmospheric neutrinos change flavors and therefore are massive, ruling out the Spectral Standard Model.
Only in 2006 a solution to the latter problem was proposed, independently by John W. Barrett

and Alain Connes


, almost at the same time.
They show that massive neutrinos can be incorporated into the model by disentangling the KO-dimension from the metric dimension for the finite space. By setting the KO-dimension to be 6, not only massive neutrinos were possible, but the see-saw mechanism was imposed by the formalism and the fermion doubling problem was also addressed.
The new version of the model was studied in

and under an additional assumption, known as the "big desert" hypothesis, computations were carried out to predict the Higgs boson mass around 170 GeV and postdict the Top quark mass.
In August 2008, Tevatron experiments
excluded a Higgs mass of 158 to 175 GeV at the 95% confidence level.
Alain Connes acknowledged on a blog about non-commutative geometry that the prediction about the Higgs mass was falsified
In July 2012, CERN announced the discovery of the Higgs boson with a mass around 125 Gev.
A proposal to address the problem of the Higgs mass was published by Ali Chamseddine and Alain Connes in 2012
by taking into account a real scalar field that was already present in the model but was neglected in previous analysis.
Another solution to the Higgs mass problem was put forward by Christopher Estrada and Matilde Marcolli by studying renormalization group flow in presence of gravitational correction terms

.