Dark Fields do Exist in Weyl Geometry

A generalized Weyl integrable geometry (GWIG) is obtained from simultaneous affine transformations of the tangent and cotangent bundles of a (pseudo)-Riemannian manifold. In comparison with the classical Weyl integrable geometry (CWIG), there are two generalizations here: interactions with an arbitr...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2020-05
1. Verfasser: Sabetghadam, Fereidoun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A generalized Weyl integrable geometry (GWIG) is obtained from simultaneous affine transformations of the tangent and cotangent bundles of a (pseudo)-Riemannian manifold. In comparison with the classical Weyl integrable geometry (CWIG), there are two generalizations here: interactions with an arbitrary dark field, and, anisotropic dilation. It means that CWIG already has interactions with a {\it null} dark field. Some classical mathematics and physics problems may be addressed in GWIG. For example, by derivation of Maxwell's equations and its sub-sets, the conservation, hyperbolic, and elliptic equations on GWIG; we imposed interactions with arbitrary dark fields. Moreover, by using a notion analogous to Penrose conformal infinity, one can impose boundary conditions canonically on these equations. As a prime example, we did it for the elliptic equation, where we obtained a singularity-free potential theory. Then we used this potential theory in the construction of a non-singular model for a point charged particle. It solves the difficulty of infinite energy of the classical vacuum state.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2005.12051