1. Introduction
It is usually accepted today in the literature that the physical foundations of what we shall simply call (classical) “gauge theory” (GT) can be found in the paper published by C.N. Yang and R.L. Mills in 1954 [1] . Having in mind the space-time formulation of electromagnetism (EM), the rough idea is to start with a manifold and a group in order to exhibit a procedure leading to a physical theory, namely a way to obtain fields and field equations from geometrical arguments on one side, both with a dual variational counterpart providing inductions and induction equations on the other side. Accordingly, the mathematical foundations of GT can be found in the references existing at this time on differential geometry and group theory, the best and most quoted one being the survey book [2] published by S. Kobayashi and K. Nomizu in 1963 (see also [3] -[6] ). The aim of this Introduction is to revisit these foundations and their applications with critical eyes, recalling them in a quite specific and self-contained way for later purposes.
The word “group” has been introduced for the first time in 1830 by Evariste Galois (1811-1832). Then this concept slowly passed from algebra (groups of permutations) to geometry (groups of transformations). It is only in 1880 that Sophus Lie (1842-1899) studied the groups of transformations depending on a finite number of parameters and now called Lie groups of transformations.
Let
be a manifold with local coordinates
and
be a Lie group, that is another manifold with local coordinates
called parameters with a composition
, an inverse
and an identity
satisfying:
Then
is said to act on
if there is a map
such that
and, for simplifying the notations, we shall use global notations even if only local actions are existing. The action is said to be effective if
. A subset
is said to be invariant under the action of
if
and the orbit of
is the invariant subset
. If
acts on two manifolds
and
, a map
is said to be equivariant if
. For reasons that will become clear later on, it is often convenient to introduce the graph
of the action. In the product
, the first factor is called the source while the second factor is called the target.
We denote as usual by
the tangent bundle of
, by
the cotangent bundle, by
the bundle of r-forms and by
the bundle of q-symmetric tensors. Moreover, if
are two vector fields on
, we may define their bracket
by the local formula
leading to the Jacobi identity
allowing to define a Lie algebra. We have also the useful formula
where
is the tangent mapping of a map
. Finally, when
is a multi-index, we may set
and introduce the exterior derivative
with
in the Poincaré sequence:
In order to fix the notations, we quote without any proof the “three fundamental theorems of Lie” that will be of constant use in the sequel (See [7] for more details):
FIRST FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM 1.1: The orbits
satisfy the system of PD equations
with
. The vector fields
are called infinitesimal generators of the action and are linearly independent over the constants when the action is effective.
In a rough way, we have
and
is thus a family of right invariant 1-forms on
called Maurer-Cartan forms or simply MC forms.
SECOND FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM 1.2: If
are the infinitesimal generators of the effective
action of a lie group
on
, then
where the
are the structure cons-
tants of a Lie algebra of vector fields which can be identified with
the tangent space to
at the identity
by using the action as we already did. Equivalently, introducing the non-degenerate inverse matrix
of right invariant vector fields on
, we obtain from crossed-derivatives the compatibility conditions (CC) for the previous system of partial differential (PD) equations called Maurer-Cartan equations or simply MC equations, namely:
(care to the sign used) or equivalently
(See [7] for more details).
Using again crossed-derivatives, we obtain the corresponding integrability conditions (IC) on the structure constants and the Cauchy-Kowaleski theorem finally provides:
THIRD FUNDAMENTAL THEOREM 1.3: For any Lie algebra
defined by structure constants
satisfying:
one can construct an analytic group
such that
by recovering the MC forms from the MC equa- tions.
EXAMPLE 1.4: Considering the affine group of transformations of the real line
, the orbits are defined by
, a definition leading to
and thus
. We obtain therefore
and
with .
GAUGING PROCEDURE 1.5: If
with
a time depending orthogonal matrix (rotation) and
a time depending vector ( translation) describes the movement of a rigid body in
, then the projection of the absolute speed
in an orthogonal frame fixed in the body is the so-called relative speed
and the kinetic energy/Lagrangian is a quadratic function of the 1-forms
. Meanwhile, taking into account the preceding example, the Eulerian speed
only depends on the 1-forms
. We notice that
and
are both
skewsymmetric time depending matrices that may be quite different.
REMARK 1.6: An easy computation in local coordinates for the case of the movement of a rigid body shows that the action of the
skewsymmetric matrix
on the position
at time
just amounts to the
vector product by the vortex vector
(See [8] - [11] for more details).
The above particular case, well known by anybody studying the analytical mechanics of rigid bodies, can be generalized as follows. If
is a manifold and
is a lie group ( not acting necessarily on
), let us consider maps
or equivalently sections of the trivial (principal) bundle
over
. If
is a point of
close to
, then
will provide a point
close to
on
. We may bring
back to
on
by acting on
with
, either on the left or on the right, getting therefore a 1-form
or
with value in
. As
we also get
if we set
as a way to link
with
. When there is an action
, we have
and thus
, a result leading through the first fundamental theorem of Lie to the equivalent formulas:
Introducing the induced bracket
, we may define the curvature
-form
by the local formula (care again to the sign):
This definition can also be adapted to
by using
and we obtain from the second fundamental theorem of Lie:
THEOREM 1.7: There is a nonlinear gauge sequence:
Choosing
“close” to
, that is
and linearizing as usual, we obtain the linear operator
leading to (See [7] for more details):
COROLLARY 1.8: There is a linear gauge sequence:
which is the tensor product by
of the Poincaré sequence.
It just remains to introduce the previous results into a variational framework. For this, we may consider a lagrangian on
, that is an action
where
and to vary it. With
we may introduce
with local coordinates
and we obtain
that is
in local coordinates. Then, setting
, we get:
and therefore, after integration by part, the Euler-Lagrange (EL) equations [7] [12] [13] :
Such a linear operator for
has non constant coefficients linearly depending on
. However, setting
, we get
while, setting
, we get the gauge transformation
. Setting
with
,
then
becomes an infinitesimal gauge transformation. Finally,
when
with
. Therefore, introducing
such that
, we get the divergence-like equations
.
In 1954, at the birth of GT, the above notations were coming from electromagnetism with EM potential
and EM field
in the relativistic Maxwell theory [14] . Accordingly,
(unit circle in the complex plane)
was the only possibility to get a pure 1-form
and a pure 2- form
when
. However, “surprisingly”, this result is not coherent at all with elasticity theory and, a fortiori with the analytical mechanics of rigid bodies where the Lagrangian is a quadratic expression of 1-forms as we saw, because the EM lagrangian
is a quadratic expression of the EM field
as a 2-form satisfying the first set of Maxwell equations
. The dielectric constant
and the magnetic constant
are leading to the electric induction
and the magnetic induction
in the second set of Maxwell equations. In view of the existence of well known and quite useful field-matter couplings such as piezoelectricity and photoelasticity [13] [15] [16] , such a situation is contradictory as it should lead to put on equal footing 1-forms and 2-forms, contrary to any unifying mathematical scheme, but no other substitute could have been provided at that time, despite the tentatives of the brothers Eugene Cosserat (1866-1931) and Francois Cosserat (1852-1914) in 1909 [13] [16] - [18] or of Herman Weyl (1885-1955) in 1918 [13] [19] .
After this long introduction, the purpose of this paper will be to escape from such a contradiction by using new mathematical tools coming from the formal theory of systems of PD equations and Lie pseudogroups, exactly as we did in [20] for general relativity (GR). In particular, the titles of the three parts that follow will be quite similar to those of this reference though, of course, the contents will be different. The first part proves hat the name “curvature” given to
has been quite misleading, the resulting confusion between translation and rotation being presented with humour in [21] through the chinese saying “to put Chang’s cap on Li’s head”. The second part explains why the Cosserat/Maxwell/Weyl (CMW) theory MUST be described by the Spencer sequence and NOT by the Janet sequence, with a SHIFT by one step contradicting the mathematical foundations of both GR and GT. The third part finally presents the Poincaré duality scheme of physics [12] by means of unexpected methods of homological algebra and algebraic analysis.
2. First Part: The Nonlinear Janet and Spencer Sequences
In 1890, Lie discovered that Lie groups of transformations were examples of Lie pseudogroups of transfor- mations along the following definition [7] [13] [22] -[24] :
DEFINITION 2.1: A Lie pseudogroup of transformations
is a group of transformations solutions of a system of OD or PD equations such that, if
and
are two solutions, called finite transformations, that can be composed, then
and
are also solutions while
is the identity solution denoted by
and we shall set
. In all the sequel we shall suppose that
is transitive that is
From now on, we shall use the same notations and definitions as in [7] [16] [20] for jet bundles. In particular, we recall that, if
is the q-jet bundle of
with local coordinates
for
,
,
and
, we may consider sections
transforming like the sections
where both
and
are over the section
of
. The (nonlinear) Spencer operator just allows to distinguish a section
from a section
by introducing a kind of “difference” through the operator
with local components
and more generally
. If
and
with source projection, we denote by
the open sub-bundle locally defined by
.
We also notice that an action
provides a Lie pseudogroup by eliminating the
parameters
among the equations
obtained by successive differentiations with respect to
only when
is large enough. The system
of PD equations thus obtained may be quite nonlinear and of high order. Looking for transformations “close” to the identity, that is setting
when
is a small constant parameter and passing to the limit
, we may linearize the above (nonlinear) system of finite
Lie equations in order to obtain a (linear) system of infinitesimal Lie equations
for vector fields. Such a system has the property that, if
are two solutions, then
is also a solution. Accordingly, the set
of its solutions satisfies
and can therefore be considered as the Lie algebra of
.
GAUGING PROCEDURE REVISITED 2.2: Setting
and
,
we obtain
because
and the matrix involved has rank
in the following commutative diagram:
Looking at the way a vector field and its derivatives are transformed under any
while replacing
by
, we obtain:
and so on, a result leading to:
LEMMA 2.3:
is associated with
that is we can obtain a new section
from any section
and any section
by the formula:
where the left member belongs to
. Similarly
is associated with
.
In order to construct another nonlinear sequence, we need a few basic definitions on Lie groupoids and Lie algebroids that will become substitutes for Lie groups and Lie algebras. The first idea is to use the chain rule for derivatives
whenever
can be composed and to replace both
and
respectively by
and
in order to obtain the new section
. This kind of “composition” law can be written in a pointwise symbolic way by introducing another copy
of
with local coordinates
as follows:
We may also define
and obtain similarly an “inversion” law.
DEFINITION 2.4: A fibered submanifold
is called a system of finite Lie equations or a Lie groupoid of order
if we have an induced source projection
, target projection
, composition
, inversion
and identity
. In the sequel we shall only consider transitive Lie groupoids such that the map
is an epimorphism. One can prove that the new system
obtained by differentiating
times all the defining equations of
is a Lie groupoid of order
.
Now, using the algebraic bracket
, we may obtain by bilinearity a differential bracket on
extending the bracket on
:
which does not depend on the respective lifts
and
of
and
in
. One can prove that his bracket on sections satisfies the Jacobi identity and we set:
DEFINITION 2.5: We say that a vector subbundle
is a system of infinitesimal Lie equations or
a Lie algebroid if
, that is to say
. Such a definition can be tested by means of computer algebra.
EXAMPLE 2.6: With
and evident notations, the components of
at order zero, one and two are defined by the totally unusual successive formulas:
For affine transformations,
and thus
.
We may prolong the vertical infinitesimal transformations
to the jet coordinates up to order
in order to obtain:
where we have replaced
by
, each component beeing the “formal” derivative of the previous one. Replacing
by
as sections of
over the target, we obtain a vertical vector field
over
such that
over the target. We may then use the Frobenius theorem in order to find a generating fundamental set of differential invariants
up to order
which are such that
by using the chain rule for derivatives whenever
acting now on
. Looking at the way the differential invariants are transformed between themselves under changes of source, we may define a natural bundle
. Specializing the
at
we obtain the Lie form
of
and a section
of
. If we introduce the maximum number of formal derivatives
that are linearly independent over the jets of strict order
, any other formal derivative is a linear combination with coefficients functions of
. Applying
, we get a contradiction unless these coefficients are killed by
and are thus functions of the fundamental set, a result leading to CC of the form
. Finally, setting
, we obtain a new natural bundle
as a vector bundle over
.
THEOREM 2.7: There exists a nonlinear Janet sequence associated with the Lie form of an involutive system of finite Lie equations:
where the kernel of the first operator
is taken with respect to the section
of
while the kernel of the second operator is taken with respect to the zero section of the vector bundle
over
(Compare to [24] [25] ).
THEOREM 2.8: There is a first nonlinear Spencer sequence:
with
. Moreover, setting
, this sequence is locally exact if
and there is an induced second nonlinear Spencer sequence (See next section for definitions):
where all the operators involved are involutive.
Proof: There is a canonical inclusion
defined by
and the composition
is a well defined section of
over the section
of
like
. The
difference
is thus a section of
over
and we have already noticed that
. For
we get with
:
We also obtain from Lemma 6.3 the useful formula
allowing to determine
inductively.
We refer to ( [7] , p 215) for the inductive proof of the local exactness, providing the only formulas that will be used later on and can be checked directly by the reader:
(1)
(2)
There is no need for double-arrows in this framework as the kernels are taken with respect to the zero section of the vector bundles involved. We finally notice that the main difference with the gauge sequence is that all the indices range from 1 to
and that the condition
amounts to
because
by assumption (See [7] [16] [23] for more details).
Q.E.D.
COROLLARY 2.9: There is a first restricted nonlinear Spencer sequence:
and an induced second restricted nonlinear Spencer sequence:
where all the operators involved are involutive and which is locally isomorphic to the corresponding gauge sequence for any Lie groups of transformations when
is large enough. The action, which is essential in the Spencer sequence, disappears in the gauge sequence.
DEFINITION 2.10: A splitting of the short exact sequence
is a map
such that
or equivalently a section of
over
and is called a
-connection. Its curvature
is defined by
. We notice that
is a connection with
if and only if
and connections cannot be used for describing fields because we must have
. İn particular
is the only existing symmetric connection for the Killing system.
REMARK 2.11: Rewriting the previous formulas with
instead of
we get:
(1*)
(2*)
When
and though surprising it may look like, we find back exactly all the formulas presented by E. and F. Cosserat in ( [17] , p 123 and [26] ) (Compare to [25] ).
Finally, setting
, we get
.
With
, we get the gauge transformation
as in the Introduction, thus ACTING ON THE FIELDS
WHILE PRESERVING THE FIELD EQUATIONS
. Setting
with
over the source, we obtain an infinitesimal gauge transformation of the form
as in [7] [13] [16] . However, setting now
and
with
over the target, we get
. The same variation is obtained whenever
with
, a transformation which only depends on
and is invertible if and only if
[7] [13] . This result proves that
is also associated with the groupoid
defined by
. With
, we have the unusual formulas:
Accordingly, THE DUAL EQUATIONS WILL ONLY DEPEND ON THE LINEAR SPENCER OPERA- TOR
. Moreover, in view of the two variational results obtained at the end of the Introduction, THE CMW EQUATIONS CANNOT COME FROM THE GAUGE SEQUENCE, contrary to what mechanicians still be- lieve after more than a century.
EXAMPLE 2.12: We have the formulas (Compare to [17] [19] , (76) p 289,(78) p 290):
(3)
(4)
Setting
, we have
.
EXAMPLE 2.13: (Projective transformations) With
, the formal adjoint of the Spencer operator brings as many dual equations as the number of parameters (1 translation + 1 dilatation + 1 elation).
Cosserat/Weyl equations :
(equivalent “momenta”).
3. Second Part: The Linear Janet and Spencer Sequences
It remains to understand how the shift by one step in the interpretation of the Spencer sequence is coherent with mechanics and electromagnetism both with their well known couplings [7] [13] [16] [20] . In a word, the problem we have to solve is to get a 2-form in
from a 1-form in
for a certain
.
For this purpose, introducing the Spencer map
defined by
, we recall from [7] [20] [27] the definition of the Janet bundles
and the Spencer bundles
or
with
. When
is an involutive system on
, we have the following crucial commutative diagram with exact columns where each operator involved is first order apart from
, generates the CC of the preceding one and is induced by the extension
of the Spencer operator
. The upper sequence is the (second) linear Spencer sequence while the lower sequence is the linear Janet sequence [7] [28] and the sum
does not depend on the system while the epimorphisms
are induced by
.
For later computations, the sequence
can be described by the images
,
,
leading to the identities:
(1**)
(2**)
We also recall that the linear Spencer sequence for a Lie group of transformations
, which essentially depends on the action because infinitesimal generators are needed, is locally isomorphic to the linear gauge sequence which does not depend on the action any longer as it is the tensor product of the Poincaré sequence by the Lie algebra
.
The main idea will be to introduce and compare the three Lie groups of transformations:
The Poincare group of transformations with
parameters leading to the Killing system
:
The Weyl group of transformations with
parameters leading to the system
:
The conformal group of transformations with 15 parameters leading to the conformal Killing system
and to the corresponding Janet/Spencer diagram:
where one has to eliminate the arbitrary function
and 1-form
for finding sections, replacing the ordinary Lie derivative
by the formal Lie derivative
, that is replacing
by
when needed.
We shall use the inclusions
in the tricky proof of the next crucial proposition:
PROPOSITION 3.1: The Spencer sequence for the conformal Lie pseudogroup projects onto the Poincare sequence with a shift by one step.
Proof: Using
as a
-connection and the fact that
while set- ting
with
and
with
, we obtain the following commutative and exact diagram:
We also obtain from the relations
and the previous identities (1**) + (2**):
As
and
, the conformal Spencer sequence projects onto the sequence
which finally projects with a shift by one step onto the Poincaré sequence
by applying the Spencer map
, because these two sequences are only made by first order involutive operators and are thus formally exact. The short exact sequence
has already been used in [16] [20] for exhibiting the Ricci tensor and the above result brings for the first time a conformal link between electromagnetism and gravitation by using second order jets (See [7] [13] for more details).
The study of the nonlinear framework is similar. Indeed, using Remark 2.11 with
, we get:
and we may finish as before as we have taken out the quadratic terms through the contraction.
Q.E.D.
This unification result, which may be considered as the ultimate “dream” of E. and F. Cosserat or H. Weyl, could not have been obtained before 1975 as it can only be produced by means of the (linear/nonlinear) Spencer sequences and NOT by means of the (linear/nonlinear) gauge sequences. We invite the reader to notice that it only depends on the Formulas (1), (2), (3), (4) and their respective (*) or (**) consequences.
4. Third Part: The Duality Scheme
A duality scheme, first introduced by Henri Poincaré (1854-1912) in [12] , namely a variational framework adapted to the Spencer sequence, could be achieved in local coordinates as we did for the gauge sequence at the end of the Introduction. We have indeed presented all the explicit formulas needed for this purpose and the reader will notice that it is difficult or even impossible to find them in [25] . However, it is much more important to relate this dual scheme to homological algebra [29] and algebraic analysis [30] [31] by using the comment done at the end of the Second Part which amounts to bring the nonlinear framework to the linear framework, a reason for which the stress equations of continuum mechanics are linear even for nonlinear elasticity [13] [16] [18] .
Let
be a unitary ring, that is
and even an integral domain, that is
or
. However, we shall not always assume that
is commutative, that is
may be different from
in general for
. We say that
is a left module over
if
or a right module
for
if the operation of
on
is
. Of course,
is a left and right module over itself. We define the torsion submodule
and
is a torsion module if
or a torsion-free module if
. We denote by
the set of morphisms
such that
. In particular
because
and we recall that a sequence of modules and maps is exact if the kernel of any map is equal to the image of the map preceding it. When
is commutative,
is again an
-module for the law
as we have
. In the non-commutative case, things are much more complicate and we have:
LEMMA 4.1: Given
and
, then
becomes a right module over
for the law
.
Proof: We just need to check the two relations:
Q.E.D.
DEFINITION 4.2: A module
is said to be free if it is isomorphic to a (finite) power of
called the rank of
over
and denoted by
while the rank of a module is the rank of a maximum free submodule. In the sequel we shall only consider finitely presented modules, namely finitely generated modules defined by exact sequences of the type
where
and
are free modules of finite ranks. For any short exact sequence
, we have
. A module
is called projective if there exists a free module
and another (projective) module
such that
. By a projective (free) resolution of
, we understand a long exact sequence
where
are projective (free) modules,
and
is the canonical projection.
We now introduce the extension modules, using the notation
and, for any morphism
, we shall denote by
the morphism which is such that
. For this, we take out
in order to obtain the deleted sequence
and apply
in order to get the sequence
.
PROPOSITION 4.3: The extension modules
and
do not depend on the resolution chosen and are torsion modules for
.
Let
be a differential field, that is a field
with
commuting derivations
with
such that
and
. Using an implicit summation on multi-indices, we may introduce the (noncommutative) ring of differential operators
with elements
such that
and
. We notice that
can be generated by
and
. Now, if we introduce differential indeterminates
, we may extend
to
for
. Therefore, setting
, we obtain by residue the differential module or
-module
. Introducing the two free differential modules
, we obtain equivalently the free presentation
. More generally, introducing the successive CC as in the preceding section, we may finally obtain the free resolution of
, namely the exact sequence
. In actual practice, we let
act on the left on column vectors in the operator case and on the right on row vectors in the module case. Homological algebra has been created for finding intrinsic properties of modules not depending on their presentation or even on their resolution.
We now exhibit another approach by defining the formal adjoint of an operartor
and an operator matrix
:
DEFINITION 4.4:
from integration by part, where
is a row vector of test functions and
the usual contraction.
LEMMA 4.5: IIf
, we may set
and we have the identity:
PROPOSITION 4.6: If we have an operator
, we obtain by duality an operator
where
is obtained from
by inverting the transition matrix.
EXAMPLE 4.7: Let us revisit EM in the light of the preceding results when
. First of all, we have
in the sequence
and the field equations are invariant under any local diffeomorphism
. By duality, we get the sequence
which is locally isomorphic (up to sign) to
and the induction equations
are thus also invariant under any
. Indeed, using the last lemma and the identity
, we have:
Accordingly, it is not correct to say that the conformal group is the biggest group of invariance of Maxwell equations as it is only the biggest group of invariance of the Minkowski constitutive laws in vacuum [14] . Finally, both sets of equations can be parametrized independently, the first by the potential, the second by the so- called pseudopotential (See [30] , p 492 for more details).
Now, with operational notations, let us consider the two differential sequences:
where
generates all the CC of
. Then
but
may not gene- rate all the CC of
. Passing to the module framework, we just recognize the definition of
. Now, exactly like we defined the differential module
from
, let us define the differential module
from
. Then
does not depend on the presentation of
[31] . More generally, changing the presentation of
may change
to
but we have [30] [32] :
THEOREM 4.8: The modules
and
are projectively equivalent, that is one can find two projective modules
and
such that
and we obtain therefore
.
THEOREM 4.9: When
is a left
-module, then
is also a left
-module.
Proof: Let us define:
It is easy to check that
in the operator sense and that
is the standard bracket of vector fields. We finally get
that is exactly the Spencer operator we used in the second part. In fact,
is the projective limit of
in a coherent way with jet theory [18] [19] [33] .
Q.E.D.
COROLLARY 4.10: if
and
are right
-modules, then
becomes a left
- module.
Proof: We just need to set
and conclude as before.
Q.E.D.
As
is a bimodule, then
is a right
-module according to Lemma 4.1 and thus the module
defined by the ker/coker sequence
is in fact a right module
.
THEOREM 4.11: We have the side changing procedure
.
Proof: According to the above Corollary, we just need to prove that
has a natural right module structure over
. For this, if
is a volume form with coefficient
, we may set
when
. As
is generated by
and
, we just need to check that the above formula has an intrinsic meaning for any
. In that case, we check at once:
by introducing the Lie derivative of
with respect to
, along the intrinsic formula
where
is the interior multiplication and
is the exterior derivative of exterior forms. According to well known properties of the Lie derivative, we get:
Q.E.D.
REMARK 4.12: The above results provide a new light on duality in physics. Indeed, as the Poincaré se- quence is self-adjoint (up to sign) as a whole and the linear Spencer sequence for a Lie group of transformations is locally isomorphic to copies of that sequence, it follows from Proposition 4.3 that
parametrizes
in the dual of the Spencer sequence while
parametrizes
in the dual of the Janet sequence, a result highly not evident at first sight in view of the Janet/Spencer diagram for the conformal group of tranformations of space-time that we have presented because
and
are totally different operators.
5. Conclusion
The mathematical foundations of Gauge Theory (GT) leading to Yang-Mills equations are always presented in textbooks or papers without quoting/taking into account the fact that the group theoretical methods involved are exactly the same as the standard ones used in continuum mechanics, particularly in the analytical mechanics of rigid bodies and in hydrodynamics. Surprisingly, the lagrangians of GT are (quadratic) functions of the curvature 2-form while the lagrangians of mechanics are (quadratic or cubic) functions of the potential 1-form. Meanwhile, the corresponding variational principle leading to Euler-Lagrange equations is also shifted by one step in the use of the same gauge sequence. This situation is contradicting the well known field/matter couplings existing between elasticity and electromagnetism (piezzoelectricity, photoelasticity). In this paper, we prove that the mathematical foundations of GT are not coherent with jet theory and the Spencer sequence. Accordingly, they must be revisited within this new framework, that is when there is a Lie group of transformations consi- dered as a Lie pseudogroup, contrary to the situation existing in GT. Such a new approach, based on new mathematical tools not known by physicists, allows unifying electromagnetism and gravitation. Finally, the striking fact that the Cosserat/Maxwell/Weyl equations can be parametrized, contrary to Einstein equations, is shown to have quite deep roots in homological algebra through the use of extension modules and duality theory in the framework of algebraic analysis.