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AdS/CFT correspondence

In theoretical physics, the anti-de Sitter/conformal field theory correspondence (frequently abbreviated as AdS/CFT) is a conjectured relationship between two kinds of physical theories. On one side are anti-de Sitter spaces (AdS) which are used in theories of quantum gravity, formulated in terms of string theory or M-theory. On the other side of the correspondence are conformal field theories (CFT) which are quantum field theories, including theories similar to the Yang–Mills theories that describe elementary particles.

The duality represents a major advance in the understanding of string theory and quantum gravity.[1] This is because it provides a non-perturbative formulation of string theory with certain boundary conditions and because it is the most successful realization of the holographic principle, an idea in quantum gravity originally proposed by Gerard 't Hooft and promoted by Leonard Susskind.

It also provides a powerful toolkit for studying strongly coupled quantum field theories.[2] Much of the usefulness of the duality results from the fact that it is a strong–weak duality: when the fields of the quantum field theory are strongly interacting, the ones in the gravitational theory are weakly interacting and thus more mathematically tractable. This fact has been used to study many aspects of nuclear and condensed matter physics by translating problems in those subjects into more mathematically tractable problems in string theory.

The AdS/CFT correspondence was first proposed by Juan Maldacena in late 1997.[3] Important aspects of the correspondence were soon elaborated on in two articles, one by Steven Gubser, Igor Klebanov and Alexander Polyakov, and another by Edward Witten. By 2015, Maldacena's article had over 10,000 citations, becoming the most highly cited article in the field of high energy physics,[4] reaching over 20,000 citations in 2020.

One of the most prominent examples of the AdS/CFT correspondence has been the AdS5/CFT4 correspondence: a relation between N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory in 3+1 dimensions and type IIB superstring theory on AdS₅×S⁵.[5]

Background edit

Quantum gravity and strings edit

Current understanding of gravity is based on Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity.[6] Formulated in 1915, general relativity explains gravity in terms of the geometry of space and time, or spacetime. It is formulated in the language of classical physics[7] developed by physicists such as Isaac Newton and James Clerk Maxwell. The other nongravitational forces are explained in the framework of quantum mechanics. Developed in the first half of the twentieth century by a number of different physicists, quantum mechanics provides a radically different way of describing physical phenomena based on probability.[8]

Quantum gravity is the branch of physics that seeks to describe gravity using the principles of quantum mechanics. Currently, a popular approach to quantum gravity is string theory,[9] which models elementary particles not as zero-dimensional points but as one-dimensional objects called strings. In the AdS/CFT correspondence, one typically considers theories of quantum gravity derived from string theory or its modern extension, M-theory.[10]

In everyday life, there are three familiar dimensions of space (up/down, left/right, and forward/backward), and there is one dimension of time. Thus, in the language of modern physics, one says that spacetime is four-dimensional.[11] One peculiar feature of string theory and M-theory is that these theories require extra dimensions of spacetime for their mathematical consistency: in string theory spacetime is ten-dimensional, while in M-theory it is eleven-dimensional.[12] The quantum gravity theories appearing in the AdS/CFT correspondence are typically obtained from string and M-theory by a process known as compactification. This produces a theory in which spacetime has effectively a lower number of dimensions and the extra dimensions are "curled up" into circles.[13]

A standard analogy for compactification is to consider a multidimensional object such as a garden hose. If the hose is viewed from a sufficient distance, it appears to have only one dimension, its length, but as one approaches the hose, one discovers that it contains a second dimension, its circumference. Thus, an ant crawling inside it would move in two dimensions.[14]

Quantum field theory edit

The application of quantum mechanics to physical objects such as the electromagnetic field, which are extended in space and time, is known as quantum field theory.[15] In particle physics, quantum field theories form the basis for our understanding of elementary particles, which are modeled as excitations in the fundamental fields. Quantum field theories are also used throughout condensed matter physics to model particle-like objects called quasiparticles.[16]

In the AdS/CFT correspondence, one considers, in addition to a theory of quantum gravity, a certain kind of quantum field theory called a conformal field theory. This is a particularly symmetric and mathematically well behaved type of quantum field theory.[17] Such theories are often studied in the context of string theory, where they are associated with the surface swept out by a string propagating through spacetime, and in statistical mechanics, where they model systems at a thermodynamic critical point.[18]

Overview of the correspondence edit

 
A tessellation of the hyperbolic plane by triangles and squares.

The geometry of anti-de Sitter space edit

In the AdS/CFT correspondence, one considers string theory or M-theory on an anti-de Sitter background. This means that the geometry of spacetime is described in terms of a certain vacuum solution of Einstein's equation called anti-de Sitter space.[19]

In very elementary terms, anti-de Sitter space is a mathematical model of spacetime in which the notion of distance between points (the metric) is different from the notion of distance in ordinary Euclidean geometry. It is closely related to hyperbolic space, which can be viewed as a disk as illustrated on the right.[20] This image shows a tessellation of a disk by triangles and squares. One can define the distance between points of this disk in such a way that all the triangles and squares are the same size and the circular outer boundary is infinitely far from any point in the interior.[21]

Now imagine a stack of hyperbolic disks where each disk represents the state of the universe at a given time. The resulting geometric object is three-dimensional anti-de Sitter space.[20] It looks like a solid cylinder in which any cross section is a copy of the hyperbolic disk. Time runs along the vertical direction in this picture. The surface of this cylinder plays an important role in the AdS/CFT correspondence. As with the hyperbolic plane, anti-de Sitter space is curved in such a way that any point in the interior is actually infinitely far from this boundary surface.[22]

 
Three-dimensional anti-de Sitter space is like a stack of hyperbolic disks, each one representing the state of the universe at a given time. The resulting spacetime looks like a solid cylinder.

This construction describes a hypothetical universe with only two space and one time dimension, but it can be generalized to any number of dimensions. Indeed, hyperbolic space can have more than two dimensions and one can "stack up" copies of hyperbolic space to get higher-dimensional models of anti-de Sitter space.[20]

The idea of AdS/CFT edit

An important feature of anti-de Sitter space is its boundary (which looks like a cylinder in the case of three-dimensional anti-de Sitter space). One property of this boundary is that, locally around any point, it looks just like Minkowski space, the model of spacetime used in nongravitational physics.[23]

One can therefore consider an auxiliary theory in which "spacetime" is given by the boundary of anti-de Sitter space. This observation is the starting point for AdS/CFT correspondence, which states that the boundary of anti-de Sitter space can be regarded as the "spacetime" for a conformal field theory. The claim is that this conformal field theory is equivalent to the gravitational theory on the bulk anti-de Sitter space in the sense that there is a "dictionary" for translating calculations in one theory into calculations in the other. Every entity in one theory has a counterpart in the other theory. For example, a single particle in the gravitational theory might correspond to some collection of particles in the boundary theory. In addition, the predictions in the two theories are quantitatively identical so that if two particles have a 40 percent chance of colliding in the gravitational theory, then the corresponding collections in the boundary theory would also have a 40 percent chance of colliding.[24]

 
A hologram is a two-dimensional image which stores information about all three dimensions of the object it represents. The two images here are photographs of a single hologram taken from different angles.

Notice that the boundary of anti-de Sitter space has fewer dimensions than anti-de Sitter space itself. For instance, in the three-dimensional example illustrated above, the boundary is a two-dimensional surface. The AdS/CFT correspondence is often described as a "holographic duality" because this relationship between the two theories is similar to the relationship between a three-dimensional object and its image as a hologram.[25] Although a hologram is two-dimensional, it encodes information about all three dimensions of the object it represents. In the same way, theories which are related by the AdS/CFT correspondence are conjectured to be exactly equivalent, despite living in different numbers of dimensions. The conformal field theory is like a hologram which captures information about the higher-dimensional quantum gravity theory.[21]

Examples of the correspondence edit

Following Maldacena's insight in 1997, theorists have discovered many different realizations of the AdS/CFT correspondence. These relate various conformal field theories to compactifications of string theory and M-theory in various numbers of dimensions. The theories involved are generally not viable models of the real world, but they have certain features, such as their particle content or high degree of symmetry, which make them useful for solving problems in quantum field theory and quantum gravity.[26]

The most famous example of the AdS/CFT correspondence states that type IIB string theory on the product space   is equivalent to N = 4 supersymmetric Yang–Mills theory on the four-dimensional boundary.[27] In this example, the spacetime on which the gravitational theory lives is effectively five-dimensional (hence the notation  ), and there are five additional compact dimensions (encoded by the   factor). In the real world, spacetime is four-dimensional, at least macroscopically, so this version of the correspondence does not provide a realistic model of gravity. Likewise, the dual theory is not a viable model of any real-world system as it assumes a large amount of supersymmetry. Nevertheless, as explained below, this boundary theory shares some features in common with quantum chromodynamics, the fundamental theory of the strong force. It describes particles similar to the gluons of quantum chromodynamics together with certain fermions.[9] As a result, it has found applications in nuclear physics, particularly in the study of the quark–gluon plasma.[28]

Another realization of the correspondence states that M-theory on   is equivalent to the so-called (2,0)-theory in six dimensions.[3] In this example, the spacetime of the gravitational theory is effectively seven-dimensional. The existence of the (2,0)-theory that appears on one side of the duality is predicted by the classification of superconformal field theories. It is still poorly understood because it is a quantum mechanical theory without a classical limit.[29] Despite the inherent difficulty in studying this theory, it is considered to be an interesting object for a variety of reasons, both physical and mathematical.[30]

Yet another realization of the correspondence states that M-theory on   is equivalent to the ABJM superconformal field theory in three dimensions.[31] Here the gravitational theory has four noncompact dimensions, so this version of the correspondence provides a somewhat more realistic description of gravity.[32]

Applications to quantum gravity edit

A non-perturbative formulation of string theory edit

 
Interaction in the quantum world: world lines of point-like particles or a world sheet swept up by closed strings in string theory.

In quantum field theory, one typically computes the probabilities of various physical events using the techniques of perturbation theory. Developed by Richard Feynman and others in the first half of the twentieth century, perturbative quantum field theory uses special diagrams called Feynman diagrams to organize computations. One imagines that these diagrams depict the paths of point-like particles and their interactions.[33] Although this formalism is extremely useful for making predictions, these predictions are only possible when the strength of the interactions, the coupling constant, is small enough to reliably describe the theory as being close to a theory without interactions.[34]

The starting point for string theory is the idea that the point-like particles of quantum field theory can also be modeled as one-dimensional objects called strings. The interaction of strings is most straightforwardly defined by generalizing the perturbation theory used in ordinary quantum field theory. At the level of Feynman diagrams, this means replacing the one-dimensional diagram representing the path of a point particle by a two-dimensional surface representing the motion of a string. Unlike in quantum field theory, string theory does not yet have a full non-perturbative definition, so many of the theoretical questions that physicists would like to answer remain out of reach.[35]

The problem of developing a non-perturbative formulation of string theory was one of the original motivations for studying the AdS/CFT correspondence.[36] As explained above, the correspondence provides several examples of quantum field theories which are equivalent to string theory on anti-de Sitter space. One can alternatively view this correspondence as providing a definition of string theory in the special case where the gravitational field is asymptotically anti-de Sitter (that is, when the gravitational field resembles that of anti-de Sitter space at spatial infinity). Physically interesting quantities in string theory are defined in terms of quantities in the dual quantum field theory.[21]

Black hole information paradox edit

In 1975, Stephen Hawking published a calculation which suggested that black holes are not completely black but emit a dim radiation due to quantum effects near the event horizon.[37] At first, Hawking's result posed a problem for theorists because it suggested that black holes destroy information. More precisely, Hawking's calculation seemed to conflict with one of the basic postulates of quantum mechanics, which states that physical systems evolve in time according to the Schrödinger equation. This property is usually referred to as unitarity of time evolution. The apparent contradiction between Hawking's calculation and the unitarity postulate of quantum mechanics came to be known as the black hole information paradox.[38]

The AdS/CFT correspondence resolves the black hole information paradox, at least to some extent, because it shows how a black hole can evolve in a manner consistent with quantum mechanics in some contexts. Indeed, one can consider black holes in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence, and any such black hole corresponds to a configuration of particles on the boundary of anti-de Sitter space.[39] These particles obey the usual rules of quantum mechanics and in particular evolve in a unitary fashion, so the black hole must also evolve in a unitary fashion, respecting the principles of quantum mechanics.[40] In 2005, Hawking announced that the paradox had been settled in favor of information conservation by the AdS/CFT correspondence, and he suggested a concrete mechanism by which black holes might preserve information.[41]

Applications to quantum field theory edit

Nuclear physics edit

One physical system which has been studied using the AdS/CFT correspondence is the quark–gluon plasma, an exotic state of matter produced in particle accelerators. This state of matter arises for brief instants when heavy ions such as gold or lead nuclei are collided at high energies. Such collisions cause the quarks that make up atomic nuclei to deconfine at temperatures of approximately two trillion kelvins, conditions similar to those present at around 10−11 seconds after the Big Bang.[42]

The physics of the quark–gluon plasma is governed by quantum chromodynamics, but this theory is mathematically intractable in problems involving the quark–gluon plasma.[43] In an article appearing in 2005, Đàm Thanh Sơn and his collaborators showed that the AdS/CFT correspondence could be used to understand some aspects of the quark–gluon plasma by describing it in the language of string theory.[28] By applying the AdS/CFT correspondence, Sơn and his collaborators were able to describe the quark gluon plasma in terms of black holes in five-dimensional spacetime. The calculation showed that the ratio of two quantities associated with the quark–gluon plasma, the shear viscosity   and volume density of entropy  , should be approximately equal to a certain universal constant:

 

where   denotes the reduced Planck constant and   is the Boltzmann constant.[44] In addition, the authors conjectured that this universal constant provides a lower bound for   in a large class of systems. In 2008, the predicted value of this ratio for the quark–gluon plasma was confirmed at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory.[45]

Another important property of the quark–gluon plasma is that very high energy quarks moving through the plasma are stopped or "quenched" after traveling only a few femtometers. This phenomenon is characterized by a number   called the jet quenching parameter, which relates the energy loss of such a quark to the squared distance traveled through the plasma. Calculations based on the AdS/CFT correspondence have allowed theorists to estimate  , and the results agree roughly with the measured value of this parameter, suggesting that the AdS/CFT correspondence will be useful for developing a deeper understanding of this phenomenon.[46]

Condensed matter physics edit

 
A magnet levitating above a high-temperature superconductor. Today some physicists are working to understand high-temperature superconductivity using the AdS/CFT correspondence.[47]

Over the decades, experimental condensed matter physicists have discovered a number of exotic states of matter, including superconductors and superfluids. These states are described using the formalism of quantum field theory, but some phenomena are difficult to explain using standard field theoretic techniques. Some condensed matter theorists including Subir Sachdev hope that the AdS/CFT correspondence will make it possible to describe these systems in the language of string theory and learn more about their behavior.[48]

So far some success has been achieved in using string theory methods to describe the transition of a superfluid to an insulator. A superfluid is a system of electrically neutral atoms that flows without any friction. Such systems are often produced in the laboratory using liquid helium, but recently[when?] experimentalists have developed new ways of producing artificial superfluids by pouring trillions of cold atoms into a lattice of criss-crossing lasers. These atoms initially behave as a superfluid, but as experimentalists increase the intensity of the lasers, they become less mobile and then suddenly transition to an insulating state. During the transition, the atoms behave in an unusual way. For example, the atoms slow to a halt at a rate that depends on the temperature and on Planck's constant, the fundamental parameter of quantum mechanics, which does not enter into the description of the other phases. This behavior has recently been understood by considering a dual description where properties of the fluid are described in terms of a higher dimensional black hole.[49]

Criticism edit

With many physicists turning towards string-based methods to solve problems in nuclear and condensed matter physics, some theorists working in these areas have expressed doubts about whether the AdS/CFT correspondence can provide the tools needed to realistically model real-world systems. In a talk at the Quark Matter conference in 2006,[50] an American physicist, Larry McLerran pointed out that the N = 4 super Yang–Mills theory that appears in the AdS/CFT correspondence differs significantly from quantum chromodynamics, making it difficult to apply these methods to nuclear physics. According to McLerran,

  supersymmetric Yang–Mills is not QCD ... It has no mass scale and is conformally invariant. It has no confinement and no running coupling constant. It is supersymmetric. It has no chiral symmetry breaking or mass generation. It has six scalar and fermions in the adjoint representation ... It may be possible to correct some or all of the above problems, or, for various physical problems, some of the objections may not be relevant. As yet there is not consensus nor compelling arguments for the conjectured fixes or phenomena which would insure that the   supersymmetric Yang Mills results would reliably reflect QCD.[50]

In a letter to Physics Today, Nobel laureate Philip W. Anderson voiced similar concerns about applications of AdS/CFT to condensed matter physics, stating

As a very general problem with the AdS/CFT approach in condensed-matter theory, we can point to those telltale initials "CFT"—conformal field theory. Condensed-matter problems are, in general, neither relativistic nor conformal. Near a quantum critical point, both time and space may be scaling, but even there we still have a preferred coordinate system and, usually, a lattice. There is some evidence of other linear-T phases to the left of the strange metal about which they are welcome to speculate, but again in this case the condensed-matter problem is overdetermined by experimental facts.[51]

History and development edit

 
Gerard 't Hooft obtained results related to the AdS/CFT correspondence in the 1970s by studying analogies between string theory and nuclear physics.

String theory and nuclear physics edit

The discovery of the AdS/CFT correspondence in late 1997 was the culmination of a long history of efforts to relate string theory to nuclear physics.[52] In fact, string theory was originally developed during the late 1960s and early 1970s as a theory of hadrons, the subatomic particles like the proton and neutron that are held together by the strong nuclear force. The idea was that each of these particles could be viewed as a different oscillation mode of a string. In the late 1960s, experimentalists had found that hadrons fall into families called Regge trajectories with squared energy proportional to angular momentum, and theorists showed that this relationship emerges naturally from the physics of a rotating relativistic string.[53]

On the other hand, attempts to model hadrons as strings faced serious problems. One problem was that string theory includes a massless spin-2 particle whereas no such particle appears in the physics of hadrons.[52] Such a particle would mediate a force with the properties of gravity. In 1974, Joël Scherk and John Schwarz suggested that string theory was therefore not a theory of nuclear physics as many theorists had thought but instead a theory of quantum gravity.[54] At the same time, it was realized that hadrons are actually made of quarks, and the string theory approach was abandoned in favor of quantum chromodynamics.[52]

In quantum chromodynamics, quarks have a kind of charge that comes in three varieties called colors. In a paper from 1974, Gerard 't Hooft studied the relationship between string theory and nuclear physics from another point of view by considering theories similar to quantum chromodynamics, where the number of colors is some arbitrary number  , rather than three. In this article, 't Hooft considered a certain limit where   tends to infinity and argued that in this limit certain calculations in quantum field theory resemble calculations in string theory.[55]

Black holes and holography edit

 
Stephen Hawking predicted in 1975 that black holes emit radiation due to quantum effects.

In 1975, Stephen Hawking published a calculation which suggested that black holes are not completely black but emit a dim radiation due to quantum effects near the event horizon.[37] This work extended previous results of Jacob Bekenstein who had suggested that black holes have a well-defined entropy.[56] At first, Hawking's result appeared to contradict one of the main postulates of quantum mechanics, namely the unitarity of time evolution. Intuitively, the unitarity postulate says that quantum mechanical systems do not destroy information as they evolve from one state to another. For this reason, the apparent contradiction came to be known as the black hole information paradox.[57]

 
Leonard Susskind made early contributions to the idea of holography in quantum gravity.

Later, in 1993, Gerard 't Hooft wrote a speculative paper on quantum gravity in which he revisited Hawking's work on black hole thermodynamics, concluding that the total number of degrees of freedom in a region of spacetime surrounding a black hole is proportional to the surface area of the horizon.[58] This idea was promoted by Leonard Susskind and is now known as the holographic principle.[59] The holographic principle and its realization in string theory through the AdS/CFT correspondence have helped elucidate the mysteries of black holes suggested by Hawking's work and are believed to provide a resolution of the black hole information paradox.[40] In 2004, Hawking conceded that black holes do not violate quantum mechanics,[60] and he suggested a concrete mechanism by which they might preserve information.[41]

Maldacena's paper edit

 
Juan Maldacena first proposed the AdS/CFT correspondence in late 1997.

On January 1, 1998, Juan Maldacena published a landmark paper that initiated the study of AdS/CFT.[3] According to Alexander Markovich Polyakov, "[Maldacena's] work opened the flood gates."[61] The conjecture immediately excited great interest in the string theory community[40] and was considered in a paper by Steven Gubser, Igor Klebanov and Polyakov,[62] and another paper of Edward Witten.[63] These papers made Maldacena's conjecture more precise and showed that the conformal field theory appearing in the correspondence lives on the boundary of anti-de Sitter space.[61]

One special case of Maldacena's proposal says that N = 4 super Yang–Mills theory, a gauge theory similar in some ways to quantum chromodynamics, is equivalent to string theory in five-dimensional anti-de Sitter space.[31] This result helped clarify the earlier work of 't Hooft on the relationship between string theory and quantum chromodynamics, taking string theory back to its roots as a theory of nuclear physics.[53] Maldacena's results also provided a concrete realization of the holographic principle with important implications for quantum gravity and black hole physics.[1] By the year 2015, Maldacena's paper had become the most highly cited paper in high energy physics with over 10,000 citations.[4] These subsequent articles have provided considerable evidence that the correspondence is correct, although so far it has not been rigorously proved.[64]

Generalizations edit

Three-dimensional gravity edit

In order to better understand the quantum aspects of gravity in our four-dimensional universe, some physicists have considered a lower-dimensional mathematical model in which spacetime has only two spatial dimensions and one time dimension.[65] In this setting, the mathematics describing the gravitational field simplifies drastically, and one can study quantum gravity using familiar methods from quantum field theory, eliminating the need for string theory or other more radical approaches to quantum gravity in four dimensions.[66]

Beginning with the work of J. David Brown and Marc Henneaux in 1986,[67] physicists have noticed that quantum gravity in a three-dimensional spacetime is closely related to two-dimensional conformal field theory. In 1995, Henneaux and his coworkers explored this relationship in more detail, suggesting that three-dimensional gravity in anti-de Sitter space is equivalent to the conformal field theory known as Liouville field theory.[68] Another conjecture formulated by Edward Witten states that three-dimensional gravity in anti-de Sitter space is equivalent to a conformal field theory with monster group symmetry.[69] These conjectures provide examples of the AdS/CFT correspondence that do not require the full apparatus of string or M-theory.[70]

dS/CFT correspondence edit

Unlike our universe, which is now known to be expanding at an accelerating rate, anti-de Sitter space is neither expanding nor contracting. Instead it looks the same at all times.[20] In more technical language, one says that anti-de Sitter space corresponds to a universe with a negative cosmological constant, whereas the real universe has a small positive cosmological constant.[71]

Although the properties of gravity at short distances should be somewhat independent of the value of the cosmological constant,[72] it is desirable to have a version of the AdS/CFT correspondence for positive cosmological constant. In 2001, Andrew Strominger introduced a version of the duality called the dS/CFT correspondence.[73] This duality involves a model of spacetime called de Sitter space with a positive cosmological constant. Such a duality is interesting from the point of view of cosmology since many cosmologists believe that the very early universe was close to being de Sitter space.[20] Our universe may also resemble de Sitter space in the distant future.[20]

Kerr/CFT correspondence edit

Although the AdS/CFT correspondence is often useful for studying the properties of black holes,[74] most of the black holes considered in the context of AdS/CFT are physically unrealistic. Indeed, as explained above, most versions of the AdS/CFT correspondence involve higher-dimensional models of spacetime with unphysical supersymmetry.

In 2009, Monica Guica, Thomas Hartman, Wei Song, and Andrew Strominger showed that the ideas of AdS/CFT could nevertheless be used to understand certain astrophysical black holes. More precisely, their results apply to black holes that are approximated by extremal Kerr black holes, which have the largest possible angular momentum compatible with a given mass.[75] They showed that such black holes have an equivalent description in terms of conformal field theory. The Kerr/CFT correspondence was later extended to black holes with lower angular momentum.[76]

Higher spin gauge theories edit

The AdS/CFT correspondence is closely related to another duality conjectured by Igor Klebanov and Alexander Markovich Polyakov in 2002.[77] This duality states that certain "higher spin gauge theories" on anti-de Sitter space are equivalent to conformal field theories with O(N) symmetry. Here the theory in the bulk is a type of gauge theory describing particles of arbitrarily high spin. It is similar to string theory, where the excited modes of vibrating strings correspond to particles with higher spin, and it may help to better understand the string theoretic versions of AdS/CFT and possibly even prove the correspondence.[78] In 2010, Simone Giombi and Xi Yin obtained further evidence for this duality by computing quantities called three-point functions.[79]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b de Haro et al. 2013, p. 2
  2. ^ Klebanov and Maldacena 2009
  3. ^ a b c Maldacena 1998. The pre-print was submitted in 1997 and published on January 1, 1998.
  4. ^ a b . INSPIRE-HEP. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
  5. ^ Ammon, Martin; Erdmenger, Johanna (2015). Gauge/Gravity Duality: Foundations and Applications (1 ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 180. ISBN 978-1-107-01034-5.
  6. ^ A standard textbook on general relativity is Wald 1984.
  7. ^ Maldacena 2005, p. 58
  8. ^ Griffiths 2004
  9. ^ a b Maldacena 2005, p. 62
  10. ^ See the subsection entitled "Examples of the correspondence". For examples which do not involve string theory or M-theory, see the section entitled "Generalizations".
  11. ^ Wald 1984, p. 4
  12. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 8
  13. ^ Zwiebach 2009, pp. 7–8
  14. ^ This analogy is used for example in Greene 2000, p. 186.
  15. ^ A standard text is Peskin and Schroeder 1995.
  16. ^ For an introduction to the applications of quantum field theory to condensed matter physics, see Zee 2010.
  17. ^ Conformal field theories are characterized by their invariance under conformal transformations.
  18. ^ For an introduction to conformal field theory emphasizing its applications to perturbative string theory, see Volume II of Deligne et al. 1999.
  19. ^ Klebanov and Maldacena 2009, p. 28
  20. ^ a b c d e f Maldacena 2005, p. 60
  21. ^ a b c Maldacena 2005, p. 61
  22. ^ The mathematical relationship between the interior and boundary of anti-de Sitter space is related to the ambient construction of Charles Fefferman and Robin Graham. For details see Fefferman and Graham 1985, Fefferman and Graham 2011.
  23. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 552
  24. ^ Maldacena 2005, pp. 61–62
  25. ^ Maldacena 2005, p. 57
  26. ^ The known realizations of AdS/CFT typically involve unphysical numbers of spacetime dimensions and unphysical supersymmetries.
  27. ^ This example is the main subject of the three pioneering articles on AdS/CFT: Maldacena 1998; Gubser, Klebanov, and Polyakov 1998; and Witten 1998.
  28. ^ a b Merali 2011, p. 303; Kovtun, Son, and Starinets 2001
  29. ^ For a review of the (2,0)-theory, see Moore 2012.
  30. ^ See Moore 2012 and Alday, Gaiotto, and Tachikawa 2010.
  31. ^ a b Aharony et al. 2008
  32. ^ Aharony et al. 2008, sec. 1
  33. ^ A standard textbook introducing the formalism of Feynman diagrams is Peskin and Schroeder 1995.
  34. ^ Zee 2010, p. 43
  35. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 12
  36. ^ Maldacena 1998, sec. 6
  37. ^ a b Hawking 1975
  38. ^ For an accessible introduction to the black hole information paradox, and the related scientific dispute between Hawking and Leonard Susskind, see Susskind 2008.
  39. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 554
  40. ^ a b c Maldacena 2005, p. 63
  41. ^ a b Hawking 2005
  42. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 559
  43. ^ More precisely, one cannot apply the methods of perturbative quantum field theory.
  44. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 561; Kovtun, Son, and Starinets 2001
  45. ^ Merali 2011, p. 303; Luzum and Romatschke 2008
  46. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 561
  47. ^ Merali 2011
  48. ^ Merali 2011, p. 303
  49. ^ Sachdev 2013, p. 51
  50. ^ a b McLerran 2007
  51. ^ Anderson 2013
  52. ^ a b c Zwiebach 2009, p. 525
  53. ^ a b Aharony et al. 2008, sec. 1.1
  54. ^ Scherk and Schwarz 1974
  55. ^ 't Hooft 1974
  56. ^ Bekenstein 1973
  57. ^ Susskind 2008
  58. ^ 't Hooft 1993
  59. ^ Susskind 1995
  60. ^ Susskind 2008, p. 444
  61. ^ a b Polyakov 2008, p. 6
  62. ^ Gubser, Klebanov, and Polyakov 1998
  63. ^ Witten 1998
  64. ^ Maldacena 2005, p. 63; Cowen 2013
  65. ^ For a review, see Carlip 2003.
  66. ^ According to the results of Witten 1988, three-dimensional quantum gravity can be understood by relating it to Chern–Simons theory.
  67. ^ Brown and Henneaux 1986
  68. ^ Coussaert, Henneaux, and van Driel 1995
  69. ^ Witten 2007
  70. ^ Guica et al. 2009, p. 1
  71. ^ Perlmutter 2003
  72. ^ Biquard 2005, p. 33
  73. ^ Strominger 2001
  74. ^ See the subsection entitled "Black hole information paradox".
  75. ^ Guica et al. 2009
  76. ^ Castro, Maloney, and Strominger 2010
  77. ^ Klebanov and Polyakov 2002
  78. ^ See the Introduction in Klebanov and Polyakov 2002.
  79. ^ Giombi and Yin 2010

References edit

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correspondence, theoretical, physics, anti, sitter, conformal, field, theory, correspondence, frequently, abbreviated, conjectured, relationship, between, kinds, physical, theories, side, anti, sitter, spaces, which, used, theories, quantum, gravity, formulate. In theoretical physics the anti de Sitter conformal field theory correspondence frequently abbreviated as AdS CFT is a conjectured relationship between two kinds of physical theories On one side are anti de Sitter spaces AdS which are used in theories of quantum gravity formulated in terms of string theory or M theory On the other side of the correspondence are conformal field theories CFT which are quantum field theories including theories similar to the Yang Mills theories that describe elementary particles The duality represents a major advance in the understanding of string theory and quantum gravity 1 This is because it provides a non perturbative formulation of string theory with certain boundary conditions and because it is the most successful realization of the holographic principle an idea in quantum gravity originally proposed by Gerard t Hooft and promoted by Leonard Susskind It also provides a powerful toolkit for studying strongly coupled quantum field theories 2 Much of the usefulness of the duality results from the fact that it is a strong weak duality when the fields of the quantum field theory are strongly interacting the ones in the gravitational theory are weakly interacting and thus more mathematically tractable This fact has been used to study many aspects of nuclear and condensed matter physics by translating problems in those subjects into more mathematically tractable problems in string theory The AdS CFT correspondence was first proposed by Juan Maldacena in late 1997 3 Important aspects of the correspondence were soon elaborated on in two articles one by Steven Gubser Igor Klebanov and Alexander Polyakov and another by Edward Witten By 2015 Maldacena s article had over 10 000 citations becoming the most highly cited article in the field of high energy physics 4 reaching over 20 000 citations in 2020 One of the most prominent examples of the AdS CFT correspondence has been the AdS5 CFT4 correspondence a relation between N 4 supersymmetric Yang Mills theory in 3 1 dimensions and type IIB superstring theory on AdS S 5 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Quantum gravity and strings 1 2 Quantum field theory 2 Overview of the correspondence 2 1 The geometry of anti de Sitter space 2 2 The idea of AdS CFT 2 3 Examples of the correspondence 3 Applications to quantum gravity 3 1 A non perturbative formulation of string theory 3 2 Black hole information paradox 4 Applications to quantum field theory 4 1 Nuclear physics 4 2 Condensed matter physics 4 3 Criticism 5 History and development 5 1 String theory and nuclear physics 5 2 Black holes and holography 5 3 Maldacena s paper 6 Generalizations 6 1 Three dimensional gravity 6 2 dS CFT correspondence 6 3 Kerr CFT correspondence 6 4 Higher spin gauge theories 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesBackground editQuantum gravity and strings edit Main articles Quantum gravity and String theory Current understanding of gravity is based on Albert Einstein s general theory of relativity 6 Formulated in 1915 general relativity explains gravity in terms of the geometry of space and time or spacetime It is formulated in the language of classical physics 7 developed by physicists such as Isaac Newton and James Clerk Maxwell The other nongravitational forces are explained in the framework of quantum mechanics Developed in the first half of the twentieth century by a number of different physicists quantum mechanics provides a radically different way of describing physical phenomena based on probability 8 Quantum gravity is the branch of physics that seeks to describe gravity using the principles of quantum mechanics Currently a popular approach to quantum gravity is string theory 9 which models elementary particles not as zero dimensional points but as one dimensional objects called strings In the AdS CFT correspondence one typically considers theories of quantum gravity derived from string theory or its modern extension M theory 10 In everyday life there are three familiar dimensions of space up down left right and forward backward and there is one dimension of time Thus in the language of modern physics one says that spacetime is four dimensional 11 One peculiar feature of string theory and M theory is that these theories require extra dimensions of spacetime for their mathematical consistency in string theory spacetime is ten dimensional while in M theory it is eleven dimensional 12 The quantum gravity theories appearing in the AdS CFT correspondence are typically obtained from string and M theory by a process known as compactification This produces a theory in which spacetime has effectively a lower number of dimensions and the extra dimensions are curled up into circles 13 A standard analogy for compactification is to consider a multidimensional object such as a garden hose If the hose is viewed from a sufficient distance it appears to have only one dimension its length but as one approaches the hose one discovers that it contains a second dimension its circumference Thus an ant crawling inside it would move in two dimensions 14 Quantum field theory edit Main articles Quantum field theory and Conformal field theory The application of quantum mechanics to physical objects such as the electromagnetic field which are extended in space and time is known as quantum field theory 15 In particle physics quantum field theories form the basis for our understanding of elementary particles which are modeled as excitations in the fundamental fields Quantum field theories are also used throughout condensed matter physics to model particle like objects called quasiparticles 16 In the AdS CFT correspondence one considers in addition to a theory of quantum gravity a certain kind of quantum field theory called a conformal field theory This is a particularly symmetric and mathematically well behaved type of quantum field theory 17 Such theories are often studied in the context of string theory where they are associated with the surface swept out by a string propagating through spacetime and in statistical mechanics where they model systems at a thermodynamic critical point 18 Overview of the correspondence edit nbsp A tessellation of the hyperbolic plane by triangles and squares The geometry of anti de Sitter space edit Further information on the mathematics described here Anti de Sitter space In the AdS CFT correspondence one considers string theory or M theory on an anti de Sitter background This means that the geometry of spacetime is described in terms of a certain vacuum solution of Einstein s equation called anti de Sitter space 19 In very elementary terms anti de Sitter space is a mathematical model of spacetime in which the notion of distance between points the metric is different from the notion of distance in ordinary Euclidean geometry It is closely related to hyperbolic space which can be viewed as a disk as illustrated on the right 20 This image shows a tessellation of a disk by triangles and squares One can define the distance between points of this disk in such a way that all the triangles and squares are the same size and the circular outer boundary is infinitely far from any point in the interior 21 Now imagine a stack of hyperbolic disks where each disk represents the state of the universe at a given time The resulting geometric object is three dimensional anti de Sitter space 20 It looks like a solid cylinder in which any cross section is a copy of the hyperbolic disk Time runs along the vertical direction in this picture The surface of this cylinder plays an important role in the AdS CFT correspondence As with the hyperbolic plane anti de Sitter space is curved in such a way that any point in the interior is actually infinitely far from this boundary surface 22 nbsp Three dimensional anti de Sitter space is like a stack of hyperbolic disks each one representing the state of the universe at a given time The resulting spacetime looks like a solid cylinder This construction describes a hypothetical universe with only two space and one time dimension but it can be generalized to any number of dimensions Indeed hyperbolic space can have more than two dimensions and one can stack up copies of hyperbolic space to get higher dimensional models of anti de Sitter space 20 The idea of AdS CFT edit An important feature of anti de Sitter space is its boundary which looks like a cylinder in the case of three dimensional anti de Sitter space One property of this boundary is that locally around any point it looks just like Minkowski space the model of spacetime used in nongravitational physics 23 One can therefore consider an auxiliary theory in which spacetime is given by the boundary of anti de Sitter space This observation is the starting point for AdS CFT correspondence which states that the boundary of anti de Sitter space can be regarded as the spacetime for a conformal field theory The claim is that this conformal field theory is equivalent to the gravitational theory on the bulk anti de Sitter space in the sense that there is a dictionary for translating calculations in one theory into calculations in the other Every entity in one theory has a counterpart in the other theory For example a single particle in the gravitational theory might correspond to some collection of particles in the boundary theory In addition the predictions in the two theories are quantitatively identical so that if two particles have a 40 percent chance of colliding in the gravitational theory then the corresponding collections in the boundary theory would also have a 40 percent chance of colliding 24 nbsp A hologram is a two dimensional image which stores information about all three dimensions of the object it represents The two images here are photographs of a single hologram taken from different angles Notice that the boundary of anti de Sitter space has fewer dimensions than anti de Sitter space itself For instance in the three dimensional example illustrated above the boundary is a two dimensional surface The AdS CFT correspondence is often described as a holographic duality because this relationship between the two theories is similar to the relationship between a three dimensional object and its image as a hologram 25 Although a hologram is two dimensional it encodes information about all three dimensions of the object it represents In the same way theories which are related by the AdS CFT correspondence are conjectured to be exactly equivalent despite living in different numbers of dimensions The conformal field theory is like a hologram which captures information about the higher dimensional quantum gravity theory 21 Examples of the correspondence edit Following Maldacena s insight in 1997 theorists have discovered many different realizations of the AdS CFT correspondence These relate various conformal field theories to compactifications of string theory and M theory in various numbers of dimensions The theories involved are generally not viable models of the real world but they have certain features such as their particle content or high degree of symmetry which make them useful for solving problems in quantum field theory and quantum gravity 26 The most famous example of the AdS CFT correspondence states that type IIB string theory on the product space A d S 5 S 5 displaystyle mathrm AdS 5 times S 5 nbsp is equivalent to N 4 supersymmetric Yang Mills theory on the four dimensional boundary 27 In this example the spacetime on which the gravitational theory lives is effectively five dimensional hence the notation A d S 5 displaystyle mathrm AdS 5 nbsp and there are five additional compact dimensions encoded by the S 5 displaystyle S 5 nbsp factor In the real world spacetime is four dimensional at least macroscopically so this version of the correspondence does not provide a realistic model of gravity Likewise the dual theory is not a viable model of any real world system as it assumes a large amount of supersymmetry Nevertheless as explained below this boundary theory shares some features in common with quantum chromodynamics the fundamental theory of the strong force It describes particles similar to the gluons of quantum chromodynamics together with certain fermions 9 As a result it has found applications in nuclear physics particularly in the study of the quark gluon plasma 28 Another realization of the correspondence states that M theory on A d S 7 S 4 displaystyle mathrm AdS 7 times S 4 nbsp is equivalent to the so called 2 0 theory in six dimensions 3 In this example the spacetime of the gravitational theory is effectively seven dimensional The existence of the 2 0 theory that appears on one side of the duality is predicted by the classification of superconformal field theories It is still poorly understood because it is a quantum mechanical theory without a classical limit 29 Despite the inherent difficulty in studying this theory it is considered to be an interesting object for a variety of reasons both physical and mathematical 30 Yet another realization of the correspondence states that M theory on A d S 4 S 7 displaystyle mathrm AdS 4 times S 7 nbsp is equivalent to the ABJM superconformal field theory in three dimensions 31 Here the gravitational theory has four noncompact dimensions so this version of the correspondence provides a somewhat more realistic description of gravity 32 Applications to quantum gravity editA non perturbative formulation of string theory edit nbsp Interaction in the quantum world world lines of point like particles or a world sheet swept up by closed strings in string theory In quantum field theory one typically computes the probabilities of various physical events using the techniques of perturbation theory Developed by Richard Feynman and others in the first half of the twentieth century perturbative quantum field theory uses special diagrams called Feynman diagrams to organize computations One imagines that these diagrams depict the paths of point like particles and their interactions 33 Although this formalism is extremely useful for making predictions these predictions are only possible when the strength of the interactions the coupling constant is small enough to reliably describe the theory as being close to a theory without interactions 34 The starting point for string theory is the idea that the point like particles of quantum field theory can also be modeled as one dimensional objects called strings The interaction of strings is most straightforwardly defined by generalizing the perturbation theory used in ordinary quantum field theory At the level of Feynman diagrams this means replacing the one dimensional diagram representing the path of a point particle by a two dimensional surface representing the motion of a string Unlike in quantum field theory string theory does not yet have a full non perturbative definition so many of the theoretical questions that physicists would like to answer remain out of reach 35 The problem of developing a non perturbative formulation of string theory was one of the original motivations for studying the AdS CFT correspondence 36 As explained above the correspondence provides several examples of quantum field theories which are equivalent to string theory on anti de Sitter space One can alternatively view this correspondence as providing a definition of string theory in the special case where the gravitational field is asymptotically anti de Sitter that is when the gravitational field resembles that of anti de Sitter space at spatial infinity Physically interesting quantities in string theory are defined in terms of quantities in the dual quantum field theory 21 Black hole information paradox edit Main article Black hole information paradox In 1975 Stephen Hawking published a calculation which suggested that black holes are not completely black but emit a dim radiation due to quantum effects near the event horizon 37 At first Hawking s result posed a problem for theorists because it suggested that black holes destroy information More precisely Hawking s calculation seemed to conflict with one of the basic postulates of quantum mechanics which states that physical systems evolve in time according to the Schrodinger equation This property is usually referred to as unitarity of time evolution The apparent contradiction between Hawking s calculation and the unitarity postulate of quantum mechanics came to be known as the black hole information paradox 38 The AdS CFT correspondence resolves the black hole information paradox at least to some extent because it shows how a black hole can evolve in a manner consistent with quantum mechanics in some contexts Indeed one can consider black holes in the context of the AdS CFT correspondence and any such black hole corresponds to a configuration of particles on the boundary of anti de Sitter space 39 These particles obey the usual rules of quantum mechanics and in particular evolve in a unitary fashion so the black hole must also evolve in a unitary fashion respecting the principles of quantum mechanics 40 In 2005 Hawking announced that the paradox had been settled in favor of information conservation by the AdS CFT correspondence and he suggested a concrete mechanism by which black holes might preserve information 41 Applications to quantum field theory editNuclear physics edit Main article AdS QCD One physical system which has been studied using the AdS CFT correspondence is the quark gluon plasma an exotic state of matter produced in particle accelerators This state of matter arises for brief instants when heavy ions such as gold or lead nuclei are collided at high energies Such collisions cause the quarks that make up atomic nuclei to deconfine at temperatures of approximately two trillion kelvins conditions similar to those present at around 10 11 seconds after the Big Bang 42 The physics of the quark gluon plasma is governed by quantum chromodynamics but this theory is mathematically intractable in problems involving the quark gluon plasma 43 In an article appearing in 2005 Đam Thanh Sơn and his collaborators showed that the AdS CFT correspondence could be used to understand some aspects of the quark gluon plasma by describing it in the language of string theory 28 By applying the AdS CFT correspondence Sơn and his collaborators were able to describe the quark gluon plasma in terms of black holes in five dimensional spacetime The calculation showed that the ratio of two quantities associated with the quark gluon plasma the shear viscosity h displaystyle eta nbsp and volume density of entropy s displaystyle s nbsp should be approximately equal to a certain universal constant h s ℏ 4 p k displaystyle frac eta s approx frac hbar 4 pi k nbsp where ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp denotes the reduced Planck constant and k displaystyle k nbsp is the Boltzmann constant 44 In addition the authors conjectured that this universal constant provides a lower bound for h s displaystyle eta s nbsp in a large class of systems In 2008 the predicted value of this ratio for the quark gluon plasma was confirmed at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory 45 Another important property of the quark gluon plasma is that very high energy quarks moving through the plasma are stopped or quenched after traveling only a few femtometers This phenomenon is characterized by a number q displaystyle widehat q nbsp called the jet quenching parameter which relates the energy loss of such a quark to the squared distance traveled through the plasma Calculations based on the AdS CFT correspondence have allowed theorists to estimate q displaystyle widehat q nbsp and the results agree roughly with the measured value of this parameter suggesting that the AdS CFT correspondence will be useful for developing a deeper understanding of this phenomenon 46 Condensed matter physics edit nbsp A magnet levitating above a high temperature superconductor Today some physicists are working to understand high temperature superconductivity using the AdS CFT correspondence 47 Main article AdS CMT Over the decades experimental condensed matter physicists have discovered a number of exotic states of matter including superconductors and superfluids These states are described using the formalism of quantum field theory but some phenomena are difficult to explain using standard field theoretic techniques Some condensed matter theorists including Subir Sachdev hope that the AdS CFT correspondence will make it possible to describe these systems in the language of string theory and learn more about their behavior 48 So far some success has been achieved in using string theory methods to describe the transition of a superfluid to an insulator A superfluid is a system of electrically neutral atoms that flows without any friction Such systems are often produced in the laboratory using liquid helium but recently when experimentalists have developed new ways of producing artificial superfluids by pouring trillions of cold atoms into a lattice of criss crossing lasers These atoms initially behave as a superfluid but as experimentalists increase the intensity of the lasers they become less mobile and then suddenly transition to an insulating state During the transition the atoms behave in an unusual way For example the atoms slow to a halt at a rate that depends on the temperature and on Planck s constant the fundamental parameter of quantum mechanics which does not enter into the description of the other phases This behavior has recently been understood by considering a dual description where properties of the fluid are described in terms of a higher dimensional black hole 49 Criticism edit With many physicists turning towards string based methods to solve problems in nuclear and condensed matter physics some theorists working in these areas have expressed doubts about whether the AdS CFT correspondence can provide the tools needed to realistically model real world systems In a talk at the Quark Matter conference in 2006 50 an American physicist Larry McLerran pointed out that the N 4 super Yang Mills theory that appears in the AdS CFT correspondence differs significantly from quantum chromodynamics making it difficult to apply these methods to nuclear physics According to McLerran N 4 displaystyle N 4 nbsp supersymmetric Yang Mills is not QCD It has no mass scale and is conformally invariant It has no confinement and no running coupling constant It is supersymmetric It has no chiral symmetry breaking or mass generation It has six scalar and fermions in the adjoint representation It may be possible to correct some or all of the above problems or for various physical problems some of the objections may not be relevant As yet there is not consensus nor compelling arguments for the conjectured fixes or phenomena which would insure that the N 4 displaystyle N 4 nbsp supersymmetric Yang Mills results would reliably reflect QCD 50 In a letter to Physics Today Nobel laureate Philip W Anderson voiced similar concerns about applications of AdS CFT to condensed matter physics stating As a very general problem with the AdS CFT approach in condensed matter theory we can point to those telltale initials CFT conformal field theory Condensed matter problems are in general neither relativistic nor conformal Near a quantum critical point both time and space may be scaling but even there we still have a preferred coordinate system and usually a lattice There is some evidence of other linear T phases to the left of the strange metal about which they are welcome to speculate but again in this case the condensed matter problem is overdetermined by experimental facts 51 History and development edit nbsp Gerard t Hooft obtained results related to the AdS CFT correspondence in the 1970s by studying analogies between string theory and nuclear physics String theory and nuclear physics edit Main articles History of string theory and 1 N expansion The discovery of the AdS CFT correspondence in late 1997 was the culmination of a long history of efforts to relate string theory to nuclear physics 52 In fact string theory was originally developed during the late 1960s and early 1970s as a theory of hadrons the subatomic particles like the proton and neutron that are held together by the strong nuclear force The idea was that each of these particles could be viewed as a different oscillation mode of a string In the late 1960s experimentalists had found that hadrons fall into families called Regge trajectories with squared energy proportional to angular momentum and theorists showed that this relationship emerges naturally from the physics of a rotating relativistic string 53 On the other hand attempts to model hadrons as strings faced serious problems One problem was that string theory includes a massless spin 2 particle whereas no such particle appears in the physics of hadrons 52 Such a particle would mediate a force with the properties of gravity In 1974 Joel Scherk and John Schwarz suggested that string theory was therefore not a theory of nuclear physics as many theorists had thought but instead a theory of quantum gravity 54 At the same time it was realized that hadrons are actually made of quarks and the string theory approach was abandoned in favor of quantum chromodynamics 52 In quantum chromodynamics quarks have a kind of charge that comes in three varieties called colors In a paper from 1974 Gerard t Hooft studied the relationship between string theory and nuclear physics from another point of view by considering theories similar to quantum chromodynamics where the number of colors is some arbitrary number N displaystyle N nbsp rather than three In this article t Hooft considered a certain limit where N displaystyle N nbsp tends to infinity and argued that in this limit certain calculations in quantum field theory resemble calculations in string theory 55 Black holes and holography edit nbsp Stephen Hawking predicted in 1975 that black holes emit radiation due to quantum effects Main articles Black hole information paradox Thorne Hawking Preskill bet and Holographic principle In 1975 Stephen Hawking published a calculation which suggested that black holes are not completely black but emit a dim radiation due to quantum effects near the event horizon 37 This work extended previous results of Jacob Bekenstein who had suggested that black holes have a well defined entropy 56 At first Hawking s result appeared to contradict one of the main postulates of quantum mechanics namely the unitarity of time evolution Intuitively the unitarity postulate says that quantum mechanical systems do not destroy information as they evolve from one state to another For this reason the apparent contradiction came to be known as the black hole information paradox 57 nbsp Leonard Susskind made early contributions to the idea of holography in quantum gravity Later in 1993 Gerard t Hooft wrote a speculative paper on quantum gravity in which he revisited Hawking s work on black hole thermodynamics concluding that the total number of degrees of freedom in a region of spacetime surrounding a black hole is proportional to the surface area of the horizon 58 This idea was promoted by Leonard Susskind and is now known as the holographic principle 59 The holographic principle and its realization in string theory through the AdS CFT correspondence have helped elucidate the mysteries of black holes suggested by Hawking s work and are believed to provide a resolution of the black hole information paradox 40 In 2004 Hawking conceded that black holes do not violate quantum mechanics 60 and he suggested a concrete mechanism by which they might preserve information 41 Maldacena s paper edit nbsp Juan Maldacena first proposed the AdS CFT correspondence in late 1997 On January 1 1998 Juan Maldacena published a landmark paper that initiated the study of AdS CFT 3 According to Alexander Markovich Polyakov Maldacena s work opened the flood gates 61 The conjecture immediately excited great interest in the string theory community 40 and was considered in a paper by Steven Gubser Igor Klebanov and Polyakov 62 and another paper of Edward Witten 63 These papers made Maldacena s conjecture more precise and showed that the conformal field theory appearing in the correspondence lives on the boundary of anti de Sitter space 61 One special case of Maldacena s proposal says that N 4 super Yang Mills theory a gauge theory similar in some ways to quantum chromodynamics is equivalent to string theory in five dimensional anti de Sitter space 31 This result helped clarify the earlier work of t Hooft on the relationship between string theory and quantum chromodynamics taking string theory back to its roots as a theory of nuclear physics 53 Maldacena s results also provided a concrete realization of the holographic principle with important implications for quantum gravity and black hole physics 1 By the year 2015 Maldacena s paper had become the most highly cited paper in high energy physics with over 10 000 citations 4 These subsequent articles have provided considerable evidence that the correspondence is correct although so far it has not been rigorously proved 64 Generalizations editThree dimensional gravity edit Main article 2 1 dimensional topological gravity In order to better understand the quantum aspects of gravity in our four dimensional universe some physicists have considered a lower dimensional mathematical model in which spacetime has only two spatial dimensions and one time dimension 65 In this setting the mathematics describing the gravitational field simplifies drastically and one can study quantum gravity using familiar methods from quantum field theory eliminating the need for string theory or other more radical approaches to quantum gravity in four dimensions 66 Beginning with the work of J David Brown and Marc Henneaux in 1986 67 physicists have noticed that quantum gravity in a three dimensional spacetime is closely related to two dimensional conformal field theory In 1995 Henneaux and his coworkers explored this relationship in more detail suggesting that three dimensional gravity in anti de Sitter space is equivalent to the conformal field theory known as Liouville field theory 68 Another conjecture formulated by Edward Witten states that three dimensional gravity in anti de Sitter space is equivalent to a conformal field theory with monster group symmetry 69 These conjectures provide examples of the AdS CFT correspondence that do not require the full apparatus of string or M theory 70 dS CFT correspondence edit Main article dS CFT correspondence Unlike our universe which is now known to be expanding at an accelerating rate anti de Sitter space is neither expanding nor contracting Instead it looks the same at all times 20 In more technical language one says that anti de Sitter space corresponds to a universe with a negative cosmological constant whereas the real universe has a small positive cosmological constant 71 Although the properties of gravity at short distances should be somewhat independent of the value of the cosmological constant 72 it is desirable to have a version of the AdS CFT correspondence for positive cosmological constant In 2001 Andrew Strominger introduced a version of the duality called the dS CFT correspondence 73 This duality involves a model of spacetime called de Sitter space with a positive cosmological constant Such a duality is interesting from the point of view of cosmology since many cosmologists believe that the very early universe was close to being de Sitter space 20 Our universe may also resemble de Sitter space in the distant future 20 Kerr CFT correspondence edit Main article Kerr CFT correspondence Although the AdS CFT correspondence is often useful for studying the properties of black holes 74 most of the black holes considered in the context of AdS CFT are physically unrealistic Indeed as explained above most versions of the AdS CFT correspondence involve higher dimensional models of spacetime with unphysical supersymmetry In 2009 Monica Guica Thomas Hartman Wei Song and Andrew Strominger showed that the ideas of AdS CFT could nevertheless be used to understand certain astrophysical black holes More precisely their results apply to black holes that are approximated by extremal Kerr black holes which have the largest possible angular momentum compatible with a given mass 75 They showed that such black holes have an equivalent description in terms of conformal field theory The Kerr CFT correspondence was later extended to black holes with lower angular momentum 76 Higher spin gauge theories edit The AdS CFT correspondence is closely related to another duality conjectured by Igor Klebanov and Alexander Markovich Polyakov in 2002 77 This duality states that certain higher spin gauge theories on anti de Sitter space are equivalent to conformal field theories with O N symmetry Here the theory in the bulk is a type of gauge theory describing particles of arbitrarily high spin It is similar to string theory where the excited modes of vibrating strings correspond to particles with higher spin and it may help to better understand the string theoretic versions of AdS CFT and possibly even prove the correspondence 78 In 2010 Simone Giombi and Xi Yin obtained further evidence for this duality by computing quantities called three point functions 79 See also editAlgebraic holography Ambient construction Randall Sundrum modelNotes edit a b de Haro et al 2013 p 2 Klebanov and Maldacena 2009 a b c Maldacena 1998 The pre print was submitted in 1997 and published on January 1 1998 a b Top Cited Articles of All Time 2014 edition INSPIRE HEP Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Retrieved 26 December 2015 Ammon Martin Erdmenger Johanna 2015 Gauge Gravity Duality Foundations and Applications 1 ed Cambridge University Press p 180 ISBN 978 1 107 01034 5 A standard textbook on general relativity is Wald 1984 Maldacena 2005 p 58 Griffiths 2004 a b Maldacena 2005 p 62 See the subsection entitled Examples of the correspondence For examples which do not involve string theory or M theory see the section entitled Generalizations Wald 1984 p 4 Zwiebach 2009 p 8 Zwiebach 2009 pp 7 8 This analogy is used for example in Greene 2000 p 186 A standard text is Peskin and Schroeder 1995 For an introduction to the applications of quantum field theory to condensed matter physics see Zee 2010 Conformal field theories are characterized by their invariance under conformal transformations For an introduction to conformal field theory emphasizing its applications to perturbative string theory see Volume II of Deligne et al 1999 Klebanov and Maldacena 2009 p 28 a b c d e f Maldacena 2005 p 60 a b c Maldacena 2005 p 61 The mathematical relationship between the interior and boundary of anti de Sitter space is related to the ambient construction of Charles Fefferman and Robin Graham For details see Fefferman and Graham 1985 Fefferman and Graham 2011 Zwiebach 2009 p 552 Maldacena 2005 pp 61 62 Maldacena 2005 p 57 The known realizations of AdS CFT typically involve unphysical numbers of spacetime dimensions and unphysical supersymmetries This example is the main subject of the three pioneering articles on AdS CFT Maldacena 1998 Gubser Klebanov and Polyakov 1998 and Witten 1998 a b Merali 2011 p 303 Kovtun Son and Starinets 2001 For a review of the 2 0 theory see Moore 2012 See Moore 2012 and Alday Gaiotto and Tachikawa 2010 a b Aharony et al 2008 Aharony et al 2008 sec 1 A standard textbook introducing the formalism of Feynman diagrams is Peskin and Schroeder 1995 Zee 2010 p 43 Zwiebach 2009 p 12 Maldacena 1998 sec 6 a b Hawking 1975 For an accessible introduction to the black hole information paradox and the related scientific dispute between Hawking and Leonard Susskind see Susskind 2008 Zwiebach 2009 p 554 a b c Maldacena 2005 p 63 a b Hawking 2005 Zwiebach 2009 p 559 More precisely one cannot apply the methods of perturbative quantum field theory Zwiebach 2009 p 561 Kovtun Son and Starinets 2001 Merali 2011 p 303 Luzum and Romatschke 2008 Zwiebach 2009 p 561 Merali 2011 Merali 2011 p 303 Sachdev 2013 p 51 a b McLerran 2007 Anderson 2013 a b c Zwiebach 2009 p 525 a b Aharony et al 2008 sec 1 1 Scherk and Schwarz 1974 t Hooft 1974 Bekenstein 1973 Susskind 2008 t Hooft 1993 Susskind 1995 Susskind 2008 p 444 a b Polyakov 2008 p 6 Gubser Klebanov and Polyakov 1998 Witten 1998 Maldacena 2005 p 63 Cowen 2013 For a review see Carlip 2003 According to the results of Witten 1988 three dimensional quantum gravity can be understood by relating it to Chern Simons theory Brown and Henneaux 1986 Coussaert Henneaux and van Driel 1995 Witten 2007 Guica et al 2009 p 1 Perlmutter 2003 Biquard 2005 p 33 Strominger 2001 See the subsection entitled Black hole information paradox Guica et al 2009 Castro Maloney and Strominger 2010 Klebanov and Polyakov 2002 See the Introduction in Klebanov and Polyakov 2002 Giombi and Yin 2010References editAharony Ofer Bergman Oren Jafferis Daniel Louis Maldacena Juan 2008 N 6 superconformal Chern Simons matter theories M2 branes and their gravity duals Journal of High Energy Physics 2008 10 091 arXiv 0806 1218 Bibcode 2008JHEP 10 091A doi 10 1088 1126 6708 2008 10 091 S2CID 16987793 Aharony Ofer Gubser Steven Maldacena Juan Ooguri Hirosi Oz Yaron 2000 Large N Field Theories String Theory and Gravity Phys Rep 323 3 4 183 386 arXiv hep th 9905111 Bibcode 2000PhR 323 183A doi 10 1016 S0370 1573 99 00083 6 S2CID 119101855 Alday Luis Gaiotto Davide Tachikawa Yuji 2010 Liouville correlation functions from four dimensional gauge theories Letters in Mathematical Physics 91 2 167 197 arXiv 0906 3219 Bibcode 2010LMaPh 91 167A doi 10 1007 s11005 010 0369 5 S2CID 15459761 Anderson Philip 2013 Strange connections to strange metals Physics Today 66 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