Trinification
Template:Short description In physics, the trinification model is a Grand Unified Theory proposed by Alvaro De Rújula, Howard Georgi and Sheldon Glashow in 1984.[1][2]
Details
It states that the gauge group is either
or
- ;
and that the fermions form three families, each consisting of the representations: , , and . The L includes a hypothetical right-handed neutrino, which may account for observed neutrino masses (see neutrino oscillations), and a similar sterile "flavon."
There is also a and maybe also a scalar field called the Higgs field which acquires a vacuum expectation value. This results in a spontaneous symmetry breaking from
- to .
The fermions branch (see restricted representation) as
- ,
- ,
- ,
and the gauge bosons as
- ,
- ,
- .
Note that there are two Majorana neutrinos per generation (which is consistent with neutrino oscillations). Also, each generation has a pair of triplets and , and doublets and , which decouple at the GUT breaking scale due to the couplings
and
- .
Note that calling representations things like and (8,1,1) is purely a physicist's convention, not a mathematician's, where representations are either labelled by Young tableaux or Dynkin diagrams with numbers on their vertices, but it is standard among GUT theorists.
Since the homotopy group
- ,
this model predicts 't Hooft–Polyakov magnetic monopoles.
Trinification is a maximal subalgebra of E6, whose matter representation Template:Math has exactly the same representation and unifies the fields. E6 adds 54 gauge bosons, 30 it shares with SO(10), the other 24 to complete its .