From Spin Connection in 5 dimensions I can define a massless fermion's covariant derivative on a curved manifold as
$$
\nabla_\mu \psi = (\partial_\mu - {i \over 4} \omega_\mu^{ab} \sigma_{ab}) \psi
\tag{1}
$$
where $\sigma_{ab}$ are the dirac bilinears and $\omega_\mu^{ab}$ is the spin connection with three indices.
In 5 dimenions I have a $4\times 4$ spinor space, giving me three sets of irreducible matrices: $I$ as identity, $\gamma^a$ as monolinears, and $\sigma_{ab}=[\gamma_a,\gamma_b]$ as bilinears. This give me a total of $1+5+10=16$ matrices forming a complete set.
In 9 dimensions I can have $9=2(4)+1$, giving me a spinor space of $2^{(4)}\times 2^{(4)}=16\times 16$ creating additional irreducibles: $\sigma^{abc}=[\gamma^a,\gamma^b,\gamma^c]$ as trilinears and $\sigma^{abcd}=[\gamma^a,\gamma^b,\gamma^c,\gamma^d]$ as quadlinears. This gives me a total of $1+9+36+84+126=256$. These numbers were calculated from the binomial coefficients ( binomial[d,k] ) for the total number of kth-linears in $d$ spacial dimensions.
Since there are additional irreduciables in $9$ dimensions, not found in 5 dimensions, does my covariant derivative in Eq. 1 have additional terms? For example
$$
\nabla_\mu \psi = \left(\partial_\mu - {i \over 4} \omega_\mu^{ab} \sigma_{ab}
- {i \over 48} \omega_\mu^{abcd} \sigma_{abcd}
\right) \psi
\tag{2}
$$
where $\omega_\mu^{abcd}$ is a new spin connection of 5 indices or is Eq. 1 still valid in $9$ dimesions?
This post imported from StackExchange MathOverflow at 2015-12-18 20:42 (UTC), posted by SE-user linuxfreebird