From Spacetime Grand Unification to Energy-Momentum Grand Unification: A First-Principles Foundation for Physics

02 October 2025, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

This paper presents a comprehensive formulation and validation of a novel theoretical framework that unifies the description of spacetime geometry and energy-momentum dynamics. We begin by articulating the principles of a Spacetime Grand Unification (STGUT), founded upon a master equation–the LL equation–which is rigorously derived from first principles starting from the energy-momentum relation with potential energy terms using Clifford algebra methods. From this foundation, we systematically derive the Energy-Momentum Grand Unification (EMGUT) as the low-energy effective theory. We provide rigorous proofs of the theory’s Lorentz covariance, gauge invariance, and probability conservation. The mathematical structure is developed within a full field-theoretic and path integral framework, including a complete derivation of the Lagrangian density and explicit matching calculations for Wilson coefficients. We then demonstrate that this effective theory successfully reproduces the core predictions of its descendants: General Relativity (with a detailed derivation of the Einstein equation from first principles), Quantum Electrodynamics (Lamb shift, electron and muon anomalous magnetic moments), and Quantum Chromodynamics (asymptotic freedom, quark confinement). Finally, we compute the theory’s unique prediction–anomalous energy level shifts in high-Z atoms–and perform a detailed contrastive verification against ultra-high-precision spectroscopic data, deriving stringent constraints on the theory’s parameters. Our analysis demonstrates that this framework provides a mathematically consistent and empirically robust foundation for unifying quantum theory and gravitation.

Keywords

Grand Unification
Quantum Gravity
Quantum Field Theory
Renormalization
Anomalous Magnetic Moment
Precision Tests
Strong-Field QED
General Relativity

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