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arxiv: 2605.15075 · v1 · pith:KB66V7Z7new · submitted 2026-05-14 · 🧮 math.RA

Non-crystallographic systems of integers over composition algebras

Pith reviewed 2026-05-15 02:32 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🧮 math.RA
keywords non-crystallographic root systemscomposition algebrasgolden integersicosian ringCayley-Dickson doublingoctonion ordersH4 root systemfinite root shells
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The pith

A weak golden octonion order arises from Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring, carrying a 240-element H4⊕H4 shell and remaining self-dual under the polar norm.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper redefines integer systems inside real normed division algebras by replacing full lattices with orders over the golden ring Zφ together with distinguished finite root shells whose Cartan coefficients lie in Zφ. Classical examples such as the Gaussian, Eisenstein, Hamilton, Hurwitz and Coxeter-Dickson integers are recovered once the order, its units and its finite shells are separated. The central construction doubles the icosian ring to obtain a free rank-8 order whose multiplication stays genuinely octonionic and whose 240-element shell is of type H4⊕H4; this order is shown to be self-dual with respect to the polar norm pairing and to admit no octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluing in the first step of its trace-integral discriminant tower.

Core claim

We construct a weak golden octonion order by Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring; the resulting free rank-8 Zφ-order has a 240-element finite shell of type H4⊕H4 and its multiplication is genuinely octonionic. We prove (i) that this weak double is self-dual with respect to the polar norm pairing, hence has no strict norm-integral overorder, and (ii) that the first trace-integral discriminant tower over it contains no octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluing.

What carries the argument

The weak golden octonion order obtained by Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring, which supplies the finite H4⊕H4 root shell and carries the self-dual polar-norm structure.

If this is right

  • The golden ring Zφ becomes the natural coefficient ring for non-crystallographic H2 and H4 systems once the lattice requirement is replaced by a finite root-shell requirement.
  • The constructed order admits no strict norm-integral overorder because it is already self-dual under the polar norm pairing.
  • The first trace-integral discriminant tower over the order contains no octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluing.
  • Classical crystallographic examples are recovered uniformly by separating the order, its units and its distinguished finite shells.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Such orders may supply algebraic models for octonionic symmetries in aperiodic structures such as quasicrystals.
  • The self-duality property could extend to other Cayley-Dickson constructions over non-crystallographic rings and yield a lattice of maximal orders.
  • Explicit basis calculations on the doubled order may produce new multiplication identities or norm formulas specific to golden-integer octonions.

Load-bearing premise

Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring preserves genuinely octonionic multiplication while producing exactly the claimed 240-element H4⊕H4 shell and satisfying self-duality and the absence of isotropic gluings without further hidden constraints.

What would settle it

Explicit computation of the multiplication table on the eight basis elements of the doubled order, followed by verification that the 240 shell vectors satisfy the H4⊕H4 Cartan relations with coefficients in Zφ and that the first trace-integral discriminant contains no octonion-stable isotropic gluing.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.15075 by Daniele Corradetti.

Figure 1.1
Figure 1.1. Figure 1.1: The two-column landscape of integer systems over composi￾tion algebras. The left column collects the classical crystallographic shells over Z, climbing by Cayley–Dickson doubling from the complex examples up to the E8 shell of the Coxeter–Dickson octonions. The right column is the golden analogue obtained by replacing Z with the golden ring Z[φ]: cyclotomic H2, icosian H4, and icosian-double H4 ⊕ H4. The… view at source ↗
Figure 3.1
Figure 3.1. Figure 3.1: Two-dimensional unit shells of the smallest composition￾algebra orders. Panel (a) shows the four Gaussian units forming the reducible crystallographic root system A1 ⊕ A1; panel (b) shows the six Eisenstein units forming the A2 shell. Panel (c) anticipates the non￾crystallographic case: the ten roots of H2 realized inside Z[ζ10], with Car￾tan coefficients that lie in Z[φ] but not in Z [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:f… view at source ↗
Figure 3.2
Figure 3.2. Figure 3.2: Petrie projection of the E8 root system in the Coxeter plane. The 240 roots fall into eight concentric 30-gons of 30 vertices each, and the highlighted {30/11} star polygon on the outer ring traces the orbit of a single root under the Coxeter element. In the present paper this picture is the crystallographic terminus on the left column of [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p008_3_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4.1
Figure 4.1. Figure 4.1: Cartan-coefficient comparison between the smallest crys￾tallographic and non-crystallographic rank-two root systems. On the left, the A2 simple roots subtend 2π/3 and produce the integer Cartan coeffi￾cient −1. On the right, the H2 simple roots subtend 4π/5 and produce the golden Cartan coefficient −φ, which lies in Z[φ] but not in Z. This is the obstruction that forces the replacement of Z by Z[φ] as th… view at source ↗
Figure 4.2
Figure 4.2. Figure 4.2: Petrie projection of the 600-cell, whose 120 vertices realize the root shell SH4 . The vertices fall into four concentric 30-gons whose radii are 2 sin(mπ/30) for m ∈ {11, 7, 3, 1}; the highlighted chords trace the {30/11} Petrie star polygon. The thirty-fold rotational symmetry visible in the picture is the projection of the Coxeter element of H4 acting on the 600-cell. The nontrivial Galois conjugation… view at source ↗
Figure 5.1
Figure 5.1. Figure 5.1: The ring Z[φ] embedded as a rank-two lattice in R 2 via the Minkowski map a + bφ 7→ (a + bφ, a + bφ∗ ). The two arrows are the images of the Z-basis {1, φ}; the shaded parallelogram is a fundamental cell. Projection on the first coordinate σ1 recovers the dense subset Z[φ] ⊂ R, while the lattice itself is discrete in R 2 . This duality, governed by the Galois action φ ∗ = 1 − φ, is the arithmetic engine … view at source ↗
Figure 6.1
Figure 6.1. Figure 6.1: The decagonal shell SH2 = {ζ k 10 : 0 ≤ k < 10} in the complex plane. The five dashed lines are the reflection axes of the dihedral Coxeter group of order ten. Two adjacent simple roots subtend the angle 4π/5, giving the golden Cartan coefficient 2⟨β, α⟩/⟨α, α⟩ = 2 cos(4π/5) = −φ. At this purely algebraic stage we use the name cyclotomic H2 integers; the expression Penrose integers is reserved for the si… view at source ↗
Figure 6.2
Figure 6.2. Figure 6.2: The shell of the weak golden octonion order G = I ⊕ Iℓ. It splits into two orthogonal copies of the icosian root shell SH4 , exchanged by left multiplication by the Cayley–Dickson generator ℓ. The resulting reflection geometry is the reducible Coxeter type H4 ⊕ H4. The order is genuinely octonionic, since the associator [i, j, ℓ] = 2kℓ is nonzero, but the root shell itself is decomposable. 6.4. The stron… view at source ↗
Figure 7.1
Figure 7.1. Figure 7.1: The operational pipeline from non-crystallographic arith￾metic to physical observables. A finite root shell over Z[φ] is promoted to a cut-and-project module in physical space; its reciprocal module sup￾plies the labels of diffraction peaks; and tight-binding spectra, densities of states, inverse participation ratios and phason modes are computed on the resulting aperiodic point set. If Λ is a finite pat… view at source ↗
Figure 7.2
Figure 7.2. Figure 7.2: Stylized decagonal Bragg diffraction pattern produced by a Z[φ]-indexed quasicrystal point set. Peaks are located on concentric ten￾fold orbits with radii in the multiplicative chain . . . , φ−1 , 1, φ, φ2 , . . .; peak intensities decay with radius and reflect the φ-inflation symmetry of the underlying cut-and-project module. The ten-fold rotational symmetry for￾bids any periodic lattice indexation but … view at source ↗
read the original abstract

In this work we revisit classical systems of integers inside the real normed division algebras from the point of view of finite norm shells and root systems. Building on the icosian framework of Moody--Patera and on the integral root-system viewpoint of Chen--Moody--Patera and of Johnson, we isolate the precise axiomatic ingredients of the non-crystallographic analogue: an order over the golden ring \(\Zphi\) together with a distinguished finite root shell whose Cartan coefficients lie in \(\Zphi\). We show that the usual Gaussian, Eisenstein, Hamilton, Hurwitz and Coxeter--Dickson examples are recovered by separating the order, its units, and its distinguished finite shells; once the lattice requirement is replaced by a finite root-shell requirement, the golden integer ring becomes the natural coefficient ring for the non-crystallographic cases \(H_2\) and \(H_4\). We then construct a weak golden octonion order by Cayley--Dickson doubling of the icosian ring; the resulting free rank-\(8\) \(\Zphi\)-order has a \(240\)-element finite shell of type \(H_4\oplus H_4\) and its multiplication is genuinely octonionic. Finally, we prove (i) that this weak double is self-dual with respect to the polar norm pairing, hence has no strict norm-integral overorder, and (ii) that the first trace-integral discriminant tower over it contains no octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluing.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The manuscript revisits integer systems in real normed division algebras via finite norm shells and root systems over the golden ring Z[φ]. It recovers classical Gaussian, Eisenstein, Hamilton, Hurwitz and Coxeter-Dickson examples by separating orders, units and shells, then constructs a weak golden octonion order by Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring. The resulting free rank-8 Z[φ]-order is asserted to possess a 240-element finite shell of type H4⊕H4 with genuinely octonionic multiplication. Two proofs are given: (i) self-duality with respect to the polar norm pairing (hence no strict norm-integral overorder), and (ii) absence of octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluings in the first trace-integral discriminant tower.

Significance. If the central construction and proofs hold, the work supplies a new maximal example of a non-crystallographic integral structure in the octonions, extending the H4 framework of Moody-Patera and Chen-Moody-Patera to rank 8. The separation of order, units and root shell, together with the explicit doubling construction and the two targeted proofs, would strengthen the axiomatic treatment of non-crystallographic systems and could inform further study of root systems and orders in composition algebras.

major comments (2)
  1. [Main construction (Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring)] Construction via Cayley-Dickson doubling: the manuscript asserts that doubling the icosian ring yields a free rank-8 Z[φ]-order whose distinguished shell consists of precisely 240 elements of type H4⊕H4 and whose multiplication satisfies the octonion composition law while remaining non-associative. Explicit verification that the doubling map sends the proposed shell into itself (up to the order) and preserves exact cardinality and non-associativity is required; without it, both self-duality and the discriminant-tower claim rest on an unverified generative step.
  2. [Proof of self-duality with respect to the polar norm pairing] Proof of self-duality (i): the polar norm pairing must be shown to make the order equal to its dual, with an explicit computation confirming that no strict norm-integral overorder exists. The argument should include the precise definition of the polar form and the verification that the dual coincides with the order itself.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Notation and terminology] Notation: the golden ring is written Zphi in the abstract; adopt a consistent LaTeX form such as ℤ[φ] or ℤ_φ throughout the text and in all statements.
  2. [Introduction and background] References: ensure that the citations to Moody-Patera, Chen-Moody-Patera and Johnson are placed at the first appearance of the relevant root-system or icosian constructions rather than only in the introduction.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and for identifying points where additional explicit verification would strengthen the presentation. We address each major comment below and will revise the manuscript accordingly.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Construction via Cayley-Dickson doubling: the manuscript asserts that doubling the icosian ring yields a free rank-8 Z[φ]-order whose distinguished shell consists of precisely 240 elements of type H4⊕H4 and whose multiplication satisfies the octonion composition law while remaining non-associative. Explicit verification that the doubling map sends the proposed shell into itself (up to the order) and preserves exact cardinality and non-associativity is required; without it, both self-duality and the discriminant-tower claim rest on an unverified generative step.

    Authors: We agree that the doubling construction benefits from a fully explicit verification step. In the revised manuscript we will insert a dedicated subsection that computes the image of the icosian 120-element shell under the Cayley-Dickson doubling map, confirms that the resulting set lies inside the proposed rank-8 order, verifies that the cardinality remains exactly 240, and checks that the multiplication remains non-associative while satisfying the octonion norm identity. This computation will be placed immediately after the definition of the doubling and before the self-duality argument, thereby removing any ambiguity in the generative step. revision: yes

  2. Referee: Proof of self-duality (i): the polar norm pairing must be shown to make the order equal to its dual, with an explicit computation confirming that no strict norm-integral overorder exists. The argument should include the precise definition of the polar form and the verification that the dual coincides with the order itself.

    Authors: We will expand the self-duality proof to begin with the precise definition of the polar norm pairing on the rank-8 order (the standard bilinear form induced by the octonion norm, restricted to the Z[φ]-module). We will then give an explicit basis computation showing that the dual module with respect to this pairing is identical to the order itself, and we will verify that no strictly larger norm-integral overorder exists by checking that any element satisfying the integrality condition with respect to the polar form already lies in the order. These explicit matrix calculations will be added to the revised text. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity detected; new construction with independent proofs

full rationale

The paper's central derivation consists of an explicit new construction of the weak golden octonion order obtained by Cayley-Dickson doubling of the icosian ring, followed by direct proofs that the resulting rank-8 Z[φ]-order is self-dual under the polar norm pairing and that its first trace-integral discriminant tower contains no octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluing. These steps are presented as fresh applications of the doubling formula to a cited external object (the icosian ring from Moody-Patera), with the shell cardinality, root-system type, and multiplication properties asserted to follow from the construction itself rather than from any fitted parameter, self-definition, or load-bearing self-citation chain. No equation or claim in the provided text reduces the target results to the inputs by construction, so the derivation remains self-contained.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 2 axioms · 1 invented entities

The paper relies on standard properties of composition algebras and the Cayley-Dickson process together with the prior icosian framework; the new object itself is constructed rather than postulated.

axioms (2)
  • standard math Standard axioms of real normed division algebras and the Cayley-Dickson doubling construction
    Invoked to define the octonion multiplication on the doubled ring.
  • domain assumption Existence and root-shell properties of the icosian ring over Z[φ]
    Taken from the Moody-Patera framework cited in the abstract.
invented entities (1)
  • weak golden octonion order no independent evidence
    purpose: A rank-8 Z[φ]-order with octonionic multiplication and a distinguished 240-element H4⊕H4 root shell
    Newly constructed via doubling; no independent evidence outside the paper is supplied.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5568 in / 1663 out tokens · 49115 ms · 2026-05-15T02:32:11.598063+00:00 · methodology

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Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

  • IndisputableMonolith/Constants.lean phi_golden_ratio echoes
    ?
    echoes

    ECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.

    We then construct a weak golden octonion order by Cayley–Dickson doubling of the icosian ring; the resulting free rank-8 Z[φ]-order has a 240-element finite shell of type H4⊕H4

  • IndisputableMonolith/Cost/FunctionalEquation.lean washburn_uniqueness_aczel echoes
    ?
    echoes

    ECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.

    the icosian double G0 = I + Iℓ ... G#0 = G0 ... first trace-integral discriminant tower ... no octonion-stable nonzero isotropic gluing

  • IndisputableMonolith/Foundation/AlexanderDuality.lean alexander_duality_circle_linking echoes
    ?
    echoes

    ECHOES: this paper passage has the same mathematical shape or conceptual pattern as the Recognition theorem, but is not a direct formal dependency.

    H4 ... 120 roots ... SG = (SH4 ⊕ 0) ∪ (0 ⊕ SH4 ℓ) ... 240 elements

What do these tags mean?
matches
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supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
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unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.

Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Integral Planes and Unit-Norm Polytopes

    math.CO 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 7.0

    Defines integral planes O² with norm sum quadratic form over crystallographic and non-crystallographic orders, recovers root systems including E8⊕E8 and H4⊕H4, proves no indecomposable rank-8 golden octonion order exi...

Reference graph

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