Statistical #physics and #quantumFieldTheory usually involve two parameters that physically only allow integer values: The dimension of space(time), and the dimensions of internal symmetry groups (such as the SU(3) in the standard model QCD, or O(N) symmetry in scalar fields). On the other hand, it is routine to formally assign non-integer values to them. Dimensional regularization sets D=4-epsilon, where epsilon is not assumed to be integer, and the #FeynmanDiagram s of O(N) symmetric theories are polynomials in N, hence allowing any value.
The present article points out that even a free, 1-component scalar field theory contains states with negative norm if one lets D be non-integer. The argument is surprisingly simple: Consider operators which are built from spacetime-derivatives d_mu acting on fields. In particular, we are interested in those operators which are antisymmetric in their indices. However, in D integer dimensions, there are D coordinate directions, and hence an operator with n>D derivatives can not be fully antisymmetric. Hence, the antisymmetric operators vanish when n>D for integer D. This does not hold for non-integer D, so that the operator actually has zeros at all the integer D. One can then see, by explicit calculation, that the 2-point functions of such operators (in the free theory!) flip sign at integer D, hence they are sometimes negative, hence the theory is not unitary.
This shows that the extension to non-integer D is very subtle; similar trouble exists for the Dirac matrices gamma_mu.
https://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.93.125025


