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Mirror symmetry (string theory)

In algebraic geometry and theoretical physics, mirror symmetry is a relationship between geometric objects called Calabi–Yau manifolds. The term refers to a situation where two Calabi–Yau manifolds look very different geometrically but are nevertheless equivalent when employed as extra dimensions of string theory.

Early cases of mirror symmetry were discovered by physicists. Mathematicians became interested in this relationship around 1990 when Philip Candelas, Xenia de la Ossa, Paul Green, and Linda Parkes showed that it could be used as a tool in enumerative geometry, a branch of mathematics concerned with counting the number of solutions to geometric questions. Candelas and his collaborators showed that mirror symmetry could be used to count rational curves on a Calabi–Yau manifold, thus solving a longstanding problem. Although the original approach to mirror symmetry was based on physical ideas that were not understood in a mathematically precise way, some of its mathematical predictions have since been proven rigorously.

Today, mirror symmetry is a major research topic in pure mathematics, and mathematicians are working to develop a mathematical understanding of the relationship based on physicists' intuition. Mirror symmetry is also a fundamental tool for doing calculations in string theory, and it has been used to understand aspects of quantum field theory, the formalism that physicists use to describe elementary particles. Major approaches to mirror symmetry include the homological mirror symmetry program of Maxim Kontsevich and the SYZ conjecture of Andrew Strominger, Shing-Tung Yau, and Eric Zaslow.

Overview edit

Strings and compactification edit

 
The fundamental objects of string theory are open and closed strings.

In physics, string theory is a theoretical framework in which the point-like particles of particle physics are replaced by one-dimensional objects called strings. These strings look like small segments or loops of ordinary string. String theory describes how strings propagate through space and interact with each other. On distance scales larger than the string scale, a string will look just like an ordinary particle, with its mass, charge, and other properties determined by the vibrational state of the string. Splitting and recombination of strings correspond to particle emission and absorption, giving rise to the interactions between particles.[1]

There are notable differences between the world described by string theory and the everyday world. In everyday life, there are three familiar dimensions of space (up/down, left/right, and forward/backward), and there is one dimension of time (later/earlier). Thus, in the language of modern physics, one says that spacetime is four-dimensional.[2] One of the peculiar features of string theory is that it requires extra dimensions of spacetime for its mathematical consistency. In superstring theory, the version of the theory that incorporates a theoretical idea called supersymmetry, there are six extra dimensions of spacetime in addition to the four that are familiar from everyday experience.[3]

One of the goals of current research in string theory is to develop models in which the strings represent particles observed in high energy physics experiments. For such a model to be consistent with observations, its spacetime must be four-dimensional at the relevant distance scales, so one must look for ways to restrict the extra dimensions to smaller scales. In most realistic models of physics based on string theory, this is accomplished by a process called compactification, in which the extra dimensions are assumed to "close up" on themselves to form circles.[4] In the limit where these curled up dimensions become very small, one obtains a theory in which spacetime has effectively a lower number of dimensions. A standard analogy for this 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. However, as one approaches the hose, one discovers that it contains a second dimension, its circumference. Thus, an ant crawling on the surface of the hose would move in two dimensions.[5]

Calabi–Yau manifolds edit

 
A cross section of a quintic Calabi–Yau manifold

Compactification can be used to construct models in which spacetime is effectively four-dimensional. However, not every way of compactifying the extra dimensions produces a model with the right properties to describe nature. In a viable model of particle physics, the compact extra dimensions must be shaped like a Calabi–Yau manifold.[4] A Calabi–Yau manifold is a special space which is typically taken to be six-dimensional in applications to string theory. It is named after mathematicians Eugenio Calabi and Shing-Tung Yau.[6]

After Calabi–Yau manifolds had entered physics as a way to compactify extra dimensions, many physicists began studying these manifolds. In the late 1980s, Lance Dixon, Wolfgang Lerche, Cumrun Vafa, and Nick Warner noticed that given such a compactification of string theory, it is not possible to reconstruct uniquely a corresponding Calabi–Yau manifold.[7] Instead, two different versions of string theory called type IIA string theory and type IIB can be compactified on completely different Calabi–Yau manifolds giving rise to the same physics.[a] In this situation, the manifolds are called mirror manifolds, and the relationship between the two physical theories is called mirror symmetry.[9]

The mirror symmetry relationship is a particular example of what physicists call a physical duality. In general, the term physical duality refers to a situation where two seemingly different physical theories turn out to be equivalent in a nontrivial way. If one theory can be transformed so it looks just like another theory, the two are said to be dual under that transformation. Put differently, the two theories are mathematically different descriptions of the same phenomena.[10] Such dualities play an important role in modern physics, especially in string theory.[b]

Regardless of whether Calabi–Yau compactifications of string theory provide a correct description of nature, the existence of the mirror duality between different string theories has significant mathematical consequences.[11] The Calabi–Yau manifolds used in string theory are of interest in pure mathematics, and mirror symmetry allows mathematicians to solve problems in enumerative algebraic geometry, a branch of mathematics concerned with counting the numbers of solutions to geometric questions. A classical problem of enumerative geometry is to enumerate the rational curves on a Calabi–Yau manifold such as the one illustrated above. By applying mirror symmetry, mathematicians have translated this problem into an equivalent problem for the mirror Calabi–Yau, which turns out to be easier to solve.[12]

In physics, mirror symmetry is justified on physical grounds.[13] However, mathematicians generally require rigorous proofs that do not require an appeal to physical intuition. From a mathematical point of view, the version of mirror symmetry described above is still only a conjecture, but there is another version of mirror symmetry in the context of topological string theory, a simplified version of string theory introduced by Edward Witten,[14] which has been rigorously proven by mathematicians.[15] In the context of topological string theory, mirror symmetry states that two theories called the A-model and B-model are equivalent in the sense that there is a duality relating them.[16] Today mirror symmetry is an active area of research in mathematics, and mathematicians are working to develop a more complete mathematical understanding of mirror symmetry based on physicists' intuition.[17]

History edit

The idea of mirror symmetry can be traced back to the mid-1980s when it was noticed that a string propagating on a circle of radius   is physically equivalent to a string propagating on a circle of radius   in appropriate units.[18] This phenomenon is now known as T-duality and is understood to be closely related to mirror symmetry.[19] In a paper from 1985, Philip Candelas, Gary Horowitz, Andrew Strominger, and Edward Witten showed that by compactifying string theory on a Calabi–Yau manifold, one obtains a theory roughly similar to the standard model of particle physics that also consistently incorporates an idea called supersymmetry.[20] Following this development, many physicists began studying Calabi–Yau compactifications, hoping to construct realistic models of particle physics based on string theory. Cumrun Vafa and others noticed that given such a physical model, it is not possible to reconstruct uniquely a corresponding Calabi–Yau manifold. Instead, there are two Calabi–Yau manifolds that give rise to the same physics.[21]

By studying the relationship between Calabi–Yau manifolds and certain conformal field theories called Gepner models, Brian Greene and Ronen Plesser found nontrivial examples of the mirror relationship.[22] Further evidence for this relationship came from the work of Philip Candelas, Monika Lynker, and Rolf Schimmrigk, who surveyed a large number of Calabi–Yau manifolds by computer and found that they came in mirror pairs.[23]

Mathematicians became interested in mirror symmetry around 1990 when physicists Philip Candelas, Xenia de la Ossa, Paul Green, and Linda Parkes showed that mirror symmetry could be used to solve problems in enumerative geometry[24] that had resisted solution for decades or more.[25] These results were presented to mathematicians at a conference at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI) in Berkeley, California in May 1991. During this conference, it was noticed that one of the numbers Candelas had computed for the counting of rational curves disagreed with the number obtained by Norwegian mathematicians Geir Ellingsrud and Stein Arild Strømme using ostensibly more rigorous techniques.[26] Many mathematicians at the conference assumed that Candelas's work contained a mistake since it was not based on rigorous mathematical arguments. However, after examining their solution, Ellingsrud and Strømme discovered an error in their computer code and, upon fixing the code, they got an answer that agreed with the one obtained by Candelas and his collaborators.[27]

In 1990, Edward Witten introduced topological string theory,[14] a simplified version of string theory, and physicists showed that there is a version of mirror symmetry for topological string theory.[28] This statement about topological string theory is usually taken as the definition of mirror symmetry in the mathematical literature.[29] In an address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1994, mathematician Maxim Kontsevich presented a new mathematical conjecture based on the physical idea of mirror symmetry in topological string theory. Known as homological mirror symmetry, this conjecture formalizes mirror symmetry as an equivalence of two mathematical structures: the derived category of coherent sheaves on a Calabi–Yau manifold and the Fukaya category of its mirror.[30]

Also around 1995, Kontsevich analyzed the results of Candelas, which gave a general formula for the problem of counting rational curves on a quintic threefold, and he reformulated these results as a precise mathematical conjecture.[31] In 1996, Alexander Givental posted a paper that claimed to prove this conjecture of Kontsevich.[32] Initially, many mathematicians found this paper hard to understand, so there were doubts about its correctness. Subsequently, Bong Lian, Kefeng Liu, and Shing-Tung Yau published an independent proof in a series of papers.[33] Despite controversy over who had published the first proof, these papers are now collectively seen as providing a mathematical proof of the results originally obtained by physicists using mirror symmetry.[34] In 2000, Kentaro Hori and Cumrun Vafa gave another physical proof of mirror symmetry based on T-duality.[13]

Work on mirror symmetry continues today with major developments in the context of strings on surfaces with boundaries.[17] In addition, mirror symmetry has been related to many active areas of mathematics research, such as the McKay correspondence, topological quantum field theory, and the theory of stability conditions.[35] At the same time, basic questions continue to vex. For example, mathematicians still lack an understanding of how to construct examples of mirror Calabi–Yau pairs though there has been progress in understanding this issue.[36]

Applications edit

Enumerative geometry edit

 
Circles of Apollonius: Eight colored circles are tangent to the three black circles.

Many of the important mathematical applications of mirror symmetry belong to the branch of mathematics called enumerative geometry. In enumerative geometry, one is interested in counting the number of solutions to geometric questions, typically using the techniques of algebraic geometry. One of the earliest problems of enumerative geometry was posed around the year 200 BCE by the ancient Greek mathematician Apollonius, who asked how many circles in the plane are tangent to three given circles. In general, the solution to the problem of Apollonius is that there are eight such circles.[37]

 
The Clebsch cubic

Enumerative problems in mathematics often concern a class of geometric objects called algebraic varieties which are defined by the vanishing of polynomials. For example, the Clebsch cubic (see the illustration) is defined using a certain polynomial of degree three in four variables. A celebrated result of nineteenth-century mathematicians Arthur Cayley and George Salmon states that there are exactly 27 straight lines that lie entirely on such a surface.[38]

Generalizing this problem, one can ask how many lines can be drawn on a quintic Calabi–Yau manifold, such as the one illustrated above, which is defined by a polynomial of degree five. This problem was solved by the nineteenth-century German mathematician Hermann Schubert, who found that there are exactly 2,875 such lines. In 1986, geometer Sheldon Katz proved that the number of curves, such as circles, that are defined by polynomials of degree two and lie entirely in the quintic is 609,250.[37]

By the year 1991, most of the classical problems of enumerative geometry had been solved and interest in enumerative geometry had begun to diminish. According to mathematician Mark Gross, "As the old problems had been solved, people went back to check Schubert's numbers with modern techniques, but that was getting pretty stale."[39] The field was reinvigorated in May 1991 when physicists Philip Candelas, Xenia de la Ossa, Paul Green, and Linda Parkes showed that mirror symmetry could be used to count the number of degree three curves on a quintic Calabi–Yau. Candelas and his collaborators found that these six-dimensional Calabi–Yau manifolds can contain exactly 317,206,375 curves of degree three.[39]

In addition to counting degree-three curves on a quintic three-fold, Candelas and his collaborators obtained a number of more general results for counting rational curves which went far beyond the results obtained by mathematicians.[40] Although the methods used in this work were based on physical intuition, mathematicians have gone on to prove rigorously some of the predictions of mirror symmetry. In particular, the enumerative predictions of mirror symmetry have now been rigorously proven.[34]

Theoretical physics edit

In addition to its applications in enumerative geometry, mirror symmetry is a fundamental tool for doing calculations in string theory. In the A-model of topological string theory, physically interesting quantities are expressed in terms of infinitely many numbers called Gromov–Witten invariants, which are extremely difficult to compute. In the B-model, the calculations can be reduced to classical integrals and are much easier.[41] By applying mirror symmetry, theorists can translate difficult calculations in the A-model into equivalent but technically easier calculations in the B-model. These calculations are then used to determine the probabilities of various physical processes in string theory. Mirror symmetry can be combined with other dualities to translate calculations in one theory into equivalent calculations in a different theory. By outsourcing calculations to different theories in this way, theorists can calculate quantities that are impossible to calculate without the use of dualities.[42]

Outside of string theory, mirror symmetry is used to understand aspects of quantum field theory, the formalism that physicists use to describe elementary particles. For example, gauge theories are a class of highly symmetric physical theories appearing in the standard model of particle physics and other parts of theoretical physics. Some gauge theories which are not part of the standard model, but which are nevertheless important for theoretical reasons, arise from strings propagating on a nearly singular background. For such theories, mirror symmetry is a useful computational tool.[43] Indeed, mirror symmetry can be used to perform calculations in an important gauge theory in four spacetime dimensions that was studied by Nathan Seiberg and Edward Witten and is also familiar in mathematics in the context of Donaldson invariants.[44] There is also a generalization of mirror symmetry called 3D mirror symmetry which relates pairs of quantum field theories in three spacetime dimensions.[45]

Approaches edit

Homological mirror symmetry edit

 
Open strings attached to a pair of D-branes

In string theory and related theories in physics, a brane is a physical object that generalizes the notion of a point particle to higher dimensions. For example, a point particle can be viewed as a brane of dimension zero, while a string can be viewed as a brane of dimension one. It is also possible to consider higher-dimensional branes. The word brane comes from the word "membrane" which refers to a two-dimensional brane.[46]

In string theory, a string may be open (forming a segment with two endpoints) or closed (forming a closed loop). D-branes are an important class of branes that arise when one considers open strings. As an open string propagates through spacetime, its endpoints are required to lie on a D-brane. The letter "D" in D-brane refers to a condition that it satisfies, the Dirichlet boundary condition.[47]

Mathematically, branes can be described using the notion of a category.[48] This is a mathematical structure consisting of objects, and for any pair of objects, a set of morphisms between them. In most examples, the objects are mathematical structures (such as sets, vector spaces, or topological spaces) and the morphisms are functions between these structures.[49] One can also consider categories where the objects are D-branes and the morphisms between two branes   and   are states of open strings stretched between   and  .[50]

In the B-model of topological string theory, the D-branes are complex submanifolds of a Calabi–Yau together with additional data that arise physically from having charges at the endpoints of strings.[50] Intuitively, one can think of a submanifold as a surface embedded inside the Calabi–Yau, although submanifolds can also exist in dimensions different from two.[25] In mathematical language, the category having these branes as its objects is known as the derived category of coherent sheaves on the Calabi–Yau.[51] In the A-model, the D-branes can again be viewed as submanifolds of a Calabi–Yau manifold. Roughly speaking, they are what mathematicians call special Lagrangian submanifolds.[51] This means among other things that they have half the dimension of the space in which they sit, and they are length-, area-, or volume-minimizing.[52] The category having these branes as its objects is called the Fukaya category.[51]

The derived category of coherent sheaves is constructed using tools from complex geometry, a branch of mathematics that describes geometric curves in algebraic terms and solves geometric problems using algebraic equations.[53] On the other hand, the Fukaya category is constructed using symplectic geometry, a branch of mathematics that arose from studies of classical physics. Symplectic geometry studies spaces equipped with a symplectic form, a mathematical tool that can be used to compute area in two-dimensional examples.[16]

The homological mirror symmetry conjecture of Maxim Kontsevich states that the derived category of coherent sheaves on one Calabi–Yau manifold is equivalent in a certain sense to the Fukaya category of its mirror.[54] This equivalence provides a precise mathematical formulation of mirror symmetry in topological string theory. In addition, it provides an unexpected bridge between two branches of geometry, namely complex and symplectic geometry.[55]

Strominger–Yau–Zaslow conjecture edit

 
A torus can be viewed as a union of infinitely many circles such as the red one in the picture. There is one such circle for each point on the pink circle.

Another approach to understanding mirror symmetry was suggested by Andrew Strominger, Shing-Tung Yau, and Eric Zaslow in 1996.[19] According to their conjecture, now known as the SYZ conjecture, mirror symmetry can be understood by dividing a Calabi–Yau manifold into simpler pieces and then transforming them to get the mirror Calabi–Yau.[56]

The simplest example of a Calabi–Yau manifold is a two-dimensional torus or donut shape.[57] Consider a circle on this surface that goes once through the hole of the donut. An example is the red circle in the figure. There are infinitely many circles like it on a torus; in fact, the entire surface is a union of such circles.[58]

One can choose an auxiliary circle   (the pink circle in the figure) such that each of the infinitely many circles decomposing the torus passes through a point of  . This auxiliary circle is said to parametrize the circles of the decomposition, meaning there is a correspondence between them and points of  . The circle   is more than just a list, however, because it also determines how these circles are arranged on the torus. This auxiliary space plays an important role in the SYZ conjecture.[52]

The idea of dividing a torus into pieces parametrized by an auxiliary space can be generalized. Increasing the dimension from two to four real dimensions, the Calabi–Yau becomes a K3 surface. Just as the torus was decomposed into circles, a four-dimensional K3 surface can be decomposed into two-dimensional tori. In this case the space   is an ordinary sphere. Each point on the sphere corresponds to one of the two-dimensional tori, except for twenty-four "bad" points corresponding to "pinched" or singular tori.[52]

The Calabi–Yau manifolds of primary interest in string theory have six dimensions. One can divide such a manifold into 3-tori (three-dimensional objects that generalize the notion of a torus) parametrized by a 3-sphere   (a three-dimensional generalization of a sphere). Each point of   corresponds to a 3-torus, except for infinitely many "bad" points which form a grid-like pattern of segments on the Calabi–Yau and correspond to singular tori.[59]

Once the Calabi–Yau manifold has been decomposed into simpler parts, mirror symmetry can be understood in an intuitive geometric way. As an example, consider the torus described above. Imagine that this torus represents the "spacetime" for a physical theory. The fundamental objects of this theory will be strings propagating through the spacetime according to the rules of quantum mechanics. One of the basic dualities of string theory is T-duality, which states that a string propagating around a circle of radius   is equivalent to a string propagating around a circle of radius   in the sense that all observable quantities in one description are identified with quantities in the dual description.[60] For example, a string has momentum as it propagates around a circle, and it can also wind around the circle one or more times. The number of times the string winds around a circle is called the winding number. If a string has momentum   and winding number   in one description, it will have momentum   and winding number   in the dual description.[60] By applying T-duality simultaneously to all of the circles that decompose the torus, the radii of these circles become inverted, and one is left with a new torus which is "fatter" or "skinnier" than the original. This torus is the mirror of the original Calabi–Yau.[61]

T-duality can be extended from circles to the two-dimensional tori appearing in the decomposition of a K3 surface or to the three-dimensional tori appearing in the decomposition of a six-dimensional Calabi–Yau manifold. In general, the SYZ conjecture states that mirror symmetry is equivalent to the simultaneous application of T-duality to these tori. In each case, the space   provides a kind of blueprint that describes how these tori are assembled into a Calabi–Yau manifold.[62]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The shape of a Calabi–Yau manifold is described mathematically using an array of numbers called Hodge numbers. The arrays corresponding to mirror Calabi–Yau manifolds are different in general, reflecting the different shapes of the manifolds, but they are related by a certain symmetry.[8]
  2. ^ Other dualities that arise in string theory are S-duality, T-duality, and the AdS/CFT correspondence.
  1. ^ For an accessible introduction to string theory, see Greene 2000.
  2. ^ Wald 1984, p. 4.
  3. ^ Zwiebach 2009, p. 8.
  4. ^ a b Yau & Nadis 2010, Ch. 6.
  5. ^ This analogy is used for example in Greene 2000, p. 186.
  6. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. ix.
  7. ^ Dixon 1988; Lerche, Vafa & Warner 1989.
  8. ^ For more information, see Yau & Nadis 2010, pp. 160–163.
  9. ^ Aspinwall et al. 2009, p. 13.
  10. ^ Hori et al. 2003, p. xvi.
  11. ^ Zaslow 2008, p. 523.
  12. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 168.
  13. ^ a b Hori & Vafa 2000.
  14. ^ a b Witten 1990.
  15. ^ Givental 1996, 1998; Lian, Liu & Yau 1997, 1999a, 1999b, 2000.
  16. ^ a b Zaslow 2008, p. 531.
  17. ^ a b Hori et al. 2003, p. xix.
  18. ^ This was first observed in Kikkawa & Yamasaki 1984 and Sakai & Senda 1986.
  19. ^ a b Strominger, Yau & Zaslow 1996.
  20. ^ Candelas et al. 1985.
  21. ^ This was observed in Dixon 1988 and Lerche, Vafa & Warner 1989.
  22. ^ Greene & Plesser 1990; Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 158.
  23. ^ Candelas, Lynker & Schimmrigk 1990; Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 163.
  24. ^ Candelas et al. 1991.
  25. ^ a b Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 165.
  26. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, pp. 169–170.
  27. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 170
  28. ^ Vafa 1992; Witten 1992.
  29. ^ Hori et al. 2003, p. xviii.
  30. ^ Kontsevich 1995b.
  31. ^ Kontsevich 1995a.
  32. ^ Givental 1996, 1998
  33. ^ Lian, Liu & Yau 1997, 1999a, 1999b, 2000.
  34. ^ a b Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 172.
  35. ^ Aspinwall et al. 2009, p. vii.
  36. ^ Zaslow 2008, p. 537.
  37. ^ a b Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 166.
  38. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 167.
  39. ^ a b Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 169.
  40. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 171.
  41. ^ Zaslow 2008, pp. 533–534.
  42. ^ Zaslow 2008, sec. 10.
  43. ^ Hori et al. 2003, p. 677.
  44. ^ Hori et al. 2003, p. 679.
  45. ^ Intriligator & Seiberg 1996.
  46. ^ Moore 2005, p. 214.
  47. ^ Moore 2005, p. 215.
  48. ^ Aspinwall et al. 2009, p. [page needed].
  49. ^ A basic reference on category theory is Mac Lane 1998.
  50. ^ a b Zaslow 2008, p. 536.
  51. ^ a b c Aspinwall et al. 2009, p. 575.
  52. ^ a b c Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 175.
  53. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, pp. 180–181.
  54. ^ Aspinwall et al. 2009, p. 616.
  55. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 181.
  56. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 174.
  57. ^ Zaslow 2008, p. 533.
  58. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, pp. 175–176.
  59. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 175–177.
  60. ^ a b Zaslow 2008, p. 532.
  61. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, p. 178.
  62. ^ Yau & Nadis 2010, pp. 178–179.

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  • Mac Lane, Saunders (1998). Categories for the Working Mathematician. Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-98403-2.
  • Moore, Gregory (2005). "What is ... a Brane?" (PDF). Notices of the AMS. 52: 214. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  • Sakai, Norisuke; Senda, Ikuo (1986). "Vacuum energies of string compactified on torus". Progress of Theoretical Physics. 75 (3): 692–705. Bibcode:1986PThPh..75..692S. doi:10.1143/PTP.75.692.
  • Strominger, Andrew; Yau, Shing-Tung; Zaslow, Eric (1996). "Mirror symmetry is T-duality". Nuclear Physics B. 479 (1): 243–259. arXiv:hep-th/9606040. Bibcode:1996NuPhB.479..243S. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(96)00434-8. S2CID 14586676.
  • Vafa, Cumrun (1992). "Topological mirrors and quantum rings". Essays on Mirror Manifolds: 96–119. arXiv:hep-th/9111017. Bibcode:1991hep.th...11017V. ISBN 978-962-7670-01-8.
  • Wald, Robert (1984). General Relativity. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-87033-5.
  • Witten, Edward (1990). "On the structure of the topological phase of two-dimensional gravity". Nuclear Physics B. 340 (2–3): 281–332. Bibcode:1990NuPhB.340..281W. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(90)90449-N.
  • Witten, Edward (1992). "Mirror manifolds and topological field theory". Essays on Mirror Manifolds: 121–160. ISBN 978-962-7670-01-8.
  • Yau, Shing-Tung; Nadis, Steve (2010). The Shape of Inner Space: String Theory and the Geometry of the Universe's Hidden Dimensions. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02023-2.
  • Zaslow, Eric (2008). "Mirror Symmetry". In Gowers, Timothy (ed.). The Princeton Companion to Mathematics. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11880-2.
  • Zwiebach, Barton (2009). A First Course in String Theory. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-88032-9.

Further reading edit

Popularizations edit

  • Yau, Shing-Tung; Nadis, Steve (2010). The Shape of Inner Space: String Theory and the Geometry of the Universe's Hidden Dimensions. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-02023-2.
  • Zaslow, Eric (2005). "Physmatics". arXiv:physics/0506153.
  • Zaslow, Eric (2008). "Mirror Symmetry". In Gowers, Timothy (ed.). The Princeton Companion to Mathematics. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-11880-2.

Textbooks edit

  • Aspinwall, Paul; Bridgeland, Tom; Craw, Alastair; Douglas, Michael; Gross, Mark; Kapustin, Anton; Moore, Gregory; Segal, Graeme; Szendröi, Balázs; Wilson, P.M.H., eds. (2009). Dirichlet Branes and Mirror Symmetry. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-3848-8.
  • Cox, David; Katz, Sheldon (1999). Mirror symmetry and algebraic geometry. American Mathematical Society. ISBN 978-0-8218-2127-5.
  • Hori, Kentaro; Katz, Sheldon; Klemm, Albrecht; Pandharipande, Rahul; Thomas, Richard; Vafa, Cumrun; Vakil, Ravi; Zaslow, Eric, eds. (2003). (PDF). American Mathematical Society. ISBN 0-8218-2955-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-19.

mirror, symmetry, string, theory, other, uses, mirror, symmetry, algebraic, geometry, theoretical, physics, mirror, symmetry, relationship, between, geometric, objects, called, calabi, manifolds, term, refers, situation, where, calabi, manifolds, look, very, d. For other uses see Mirror symmetry In algebraic geometry and theoretical physics mirror symmetry is a relationship between geometric objects called Calabi Yau manifolds The term refers to a situation where two Calabi Yau manifolds look very different geometrically but are nevertheless equivalent when employed as extra dimensions of string theory Early cases of mirror symmetry were discovered by physicists Mathematicians became interested in this relationship around 1990 when Philip Candelas Xenia de la Ossa Paul Green and Linda Parkes showed that it could be used as a tool in enumerative geometry a branch of mathematics concerned with counting the number of solutions to geometric questions Candelas and his collaborators showed that mirror symmetry could be used to count rational curves on a Calabi Yau manifold thus solving a longstanding problem Although the original approach to mirror symmetry was based on physical ideas that were not understood in a mathematically precise way some of its mathematical predictions have since been proven rigorously Today mirror symmetry is a major research topic in pure mathematics and mathematicians are working to develop a mathematical understanding of the relationship based on physicists intuition Mirror symmetry is also a fundamental tool for doing calculations in string theory and it has been used to understand aspects of quantum field theory the formalism that physicists use to describe elementary particles Major approaches to mirror symmetry include the homological mirror symmetry program of Maxim Kontsevich and the SYZ conjecture of Andrew Strominger Shing Tung Yau and Eric Zaslow Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Strings and compactification 1 2 Calabi Yau manifolds 2 History 3 Applications 3 1 Enumerative geometry 3 2 Theoretical physics 4 Approaches 4 1 Homological mirror symmetry 4 2 Strominger Yau Zaslow conjecture 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Popularizations 8 2 TextbooksOverview editStrings and compactification edit Main articles String theory and Compactification physics nbsp The fundamental objects of string theory are open and closed strings In physics string theory is a theoretical framework in which the point like particles of particle physics are replaced by one dimensional objects called strings These strings look like small segments or loops of ordinary string String theory describes how strings propagate through space and interact with each other On distance scales larger than the string scale a string will look just like an ordinary particle with its mass charge and other properties determined by the vibrational state of the string Splitting and recombination of strings correspond to particle emission and absorption giving rise to the interactions between particles 1 There are notable differences between the world described by string theory and the everyday world In everyday life there are three familiar dimensions of space up down left right and forward backward and there is one dimension of time later earlier Thus in the language of modern physics one says that spacetime is four dimensional 2 One of the peculiar features of string theory is that it requires extra dimensions of spacetime for its mathematical consistency In superstring theory the version of the theory that incorporates a theoretical idea called supersymmetry there are six extra dimensions of spacetime in addition to the four that are familiar from everyday experience 3 One of the goals of current research in string theory is to develop models in which the strings represent particles observed in high energy physics experiments For such a model to be consistent with observations its spacetime must be four dimensional at the relevant distance scales so one must look for ways to restrict the extra dimensions to smaller scales In most realistic models of physics based on string theory this is accomplished by a process called compactification in which the extra dimensions are assumed to close up on themselves to form circles 4 In the limit where these curled up dimensions become very small one obtains a theory in which spacetime has effectively a lower number of dimensions A standard analogy for this 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 However as one approaches the hose one discovers that it contains a second dimension its circumference Thus an ant crawling on the surface of the hose would move in two dimensions 5 Calabi Yau manifolds edit Main article Calabi Yau manifold nbsp A cross section of a quintic Calabi Yau manifoldCompactification can be used to construct models in which spacetime is effectively four dimensional However not every way of compactifying the extra dimensions produces a model with the right properties to describe nature In a viable model of particle physics the compact extra dimensions must be shaped like a Calabi Yau manifold 4 A Calabi Yau manifold is a special space which is typically taken to be six dimensional in applications to string theory It is named after mathematicians Eugenio Calabi and Shing Tung Yau 6 After Calabi Yau manifolds had entered physics as a way to compactify extra dimensions many physicists began studying these manifolds In the late 1980s Lance Dixon Wolfgang Lerche Cumrun Vafa and Nick Warner noticed that given such a compactification of string theory it is not possible to reconstruct uniquely a corresponding Calabi Yau manifold 7 Instead two different versions of string theory called type IIA string theory and type IIB can be compactified on completely different Calabi Yau manifolds giving rise to the same physics a In this situation the manifolds are called mirror manifolds and the relationship between the two physical theories is called mirror symmetry 9 The mirror symmetry relationship is a particular example of what physicists call a physical duality In general the term physical duality refers to a situation where two seemingly different physical theories turn out to be equivalent in a nontrivial way If one theory can be transformed so it looks just like another theory the two are said to be dual under that transformation Put differently the two theories are mathematically different descriptions of the same phenomena 10 Such dualities play an important role in modern physics especially in string theory b Regardless of whether Calabi Yau compactifications of string theory provide a correct description of nature the existence of the mirror duality between different string theories has significant mathematical consequences 11 The Calabi Yau manifolds used in string theory are of interest in pure mathematics and mirror symmetry allows mathematicians to solve problems in enumerative algebraic geometry a branch of mathematics concerned with counting the numbers of solutions to geometric questions A classical problem of enumerative geometry is to enumerate the rational curves on a Calabi Yau manifold such as the one illustrated above By applying mirror symmetry mathematicians have translated this problem into an equivalent problem for the mirror Calabi Yau which turns out to be easier to solve 12 In physics mirror symmetry is justified on physical grounds 13 However mathematicians generally require rigorous proofs that do not require an appeal to physical intuition From a mathematical point of view the version of mirror symmetry described above is still only a conjecture but there is another version of mirror symmetry in the context of topological string theory a simplified version of string theory introduced by Edward Witten 14 which has been rigorously proven by mathematicians 15 In the context of topological string theory mirror symmetry states that two theories called the A model and B model are equivalent in the sense that there is a duality relating them 16 Today mirror symmetry is an active area of research in mathematics and mathematicians are working to develop a more complete mathematical understanding of mirror symmetry based on physicists intuition 17 History editThe idea of mirror symmetry can be traced back to the mid 1980s when it was noticed that a string propagating on a circle of radius R displaystyle R nbsp is physically equivalent to a string propagating on a circle of radius 1 R displaystyle 1 R nbsp in appropriate units 18 This phenomenon is now known as T duality and is understood to be closely related to mirror symmetry 19 In a paper from 1985 Philip Candelas Gary Horowitz Andrew Strominger and Edward Witten showed that by compactifying string theory on a Calabi Yau manifold one obtains a theory roughly similar to the standard model of particle physics that also consistently incorporates an idea called supersymmetry 20 Following this development many physicists began studying Calabi Yau compactifications hoping to construct realistic models of particle physics based on string theory Cumrun Vafa and others noticed that given such a physical model it is not possible to reconstruct uniquely a corresponding Calabi Yau manifold Instead there are two Calabi Yau manifolds that give rise to the same physics 21 By studying the relationship between Calabi Yau manifolds and certain conformal field theories called Gepner models Brian Greene and Ronen Plesser found nontrivial examples of the mirror relationship 22 Further evidence for this relationship came from the work of Philip Candelas Monika Lynker and Rolf Schimmrigk who surveyed a large number of Calabi Yau manifolds by computer and found that they came in mirror pairs 23 Mathematicians became interested in mirror symmetry around 1990 when physicists Philip Candelas Xenia de la Ossa Paul Green and Linda Parkes showed that mirror symmetry could be used to solve problems in enumerative geometry 24 that had resisted solution for decades or more 25 These results were presented to mathematicians at a conference at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute MSRI in Berkeley California in May 1991 During this conference it was noticed that one of the numbers Candelas had computed for the counting of rational curves disagreed with the number obtained by Norwegian mathematicians Geir Ellingsrud and Stein Arild Stromme using ostensibly more rigorous techniques 26 Many mathematicians at the conference assumed that Candelas s work contained a mistake since it was not based on rigorous mathematical arguments However after examining their solution Ellingsrud and Stromme discovered an error in their computer code and upon fixing the code they got an answer that agreed with the one obtained by Candelas and his collaborators 27 In 1990 Edward Witten introduced topological string theory 14 a simplified version of string theory and physicists showed that there is a version of mirror symmetry for topological string theory 28 This statement about topological string theory is usually taken as the definition of mirror symmetry in the mathematical literature 29 In an address at the International Congress of Mathematicians in 1994 mathematician Maxim Kontsevich presented a new mathematical conjecture based on the physical idea of mirror symmetry in topological string theory Known as homological mirror symmetry this conjecture formalizes mirror symmetry as an equivalence of two mathematical structures the derived category of coherent sheaves on a Calabi Yau manifold and the Fukaya category of its mirror 30 Also around 1995 Kontsevich analyzed the results of Candelas which gave a general formula for the problem of counting rational curves on a quintic threefold and he reformulated these results as a precise mathematical conjecture 31 In 1996 Alexander Givental posted a paper that claimed to prove this conjecture of Kontsevich 32 Initially many mathematicians found this paper hard to understand so there were doubts about its correctness Subsequently Bong Lian Kefeng Liu and Shing Tung Yau published an independent proof in a series of papers 33 Despite controversy over who had published the first proof these papers are now collectively seen as providing a mathematical proof of the results originally obtained by physicists using mirror symmetry 34 In 2000 Kentaro Hori and Cumrun Vafa gave another physical proof of mirror symmetry based on T duality 13 Work on mirror symmetry continues today with major developments in the context of strings on surfaces with boundaries 17 In addition mirror symmetry has been related to many active areas of mathematics research such as the McKay correspondence topological quantum field theory and the theory of stability conditions 35 At the same time basic questions continue to vex For example mathematicians still lack an understanding of how to construct examples of mirror Calabi Yau pairs though there has been progress in understanding this issue 36 Applications editEnumerative geometry edit Main article Enumerative geometry nbsp Circles of Apollonius Eight colored circles are tangent to the three black circles Many of the important mathematical applications of mirror symmetry belong to the branch of mathematics called enumerative geometry In enumerative geometry one is interested in counting the number of solutions to geometric questions typically using the techniques of algebraic geometry One of the earliest problems of enumerative geometry was posed around the year 200 BCE by the ancient Greek mathematician Apollonius who asked how many circles in the plane are tangent to three given circles In general the solution to the problem of Apollonius is that there are eight such circles 37 nbsp The Clebsch cubicEnumerative problems in mathematics often concern a class of geometric objects called algebraic varieties which are defined by the vanishing of polynomials For example the Clebsch cubic see the illustration is defined using a certain polynomial of degree three in four variables A celebrated result of nineteenth century mathematicians Arthur Cayley and George Salmon states that there are exactly 27 straight lines that lie entirely on such a surface 38 Generalizing this problem one can ask how many lines can be drawn on a quintic Calabi Yau manifold such as the one illustrated above which is defined by a polynomial of degree five This problem was solved by the nineteenth century German mathematician Hermann Schubert who found that there are exactly 2 875 such lines In 1986 geometer Sheldon Katz proved that the number of curves such as circles that are defined by polynomials of degree two and lie entirely in the quintic is 609 250 37 By the year 1991 most of the classical problems of enumerative geometry had been solved and interest in enumerative geometry had begun to diminish According to mathematician Mark Gross As the old problems had been solved people went back to check Schubert s numbers with modern techniques but that was getting pretty stale 39 The field was reinvigorated in May 1991 when physicists Philip Candelas Xenia de la Ossa Paul Green and Linda Parkes showed that mirror symmetry could be used to count the number of degree three curves on a quintic Calabi Yau Candelas and his collaborators found that these six dimensional Calabi Yau manifolds can contain exactly 317 206 375 curves of degree three 39 In addition to counting degree three curves on a quintic three fold Candelas and his collaborators obtained a number of more general results for counting rational curves which went far beyond the results obtained by mathematicians 40 Although the methods used in this work were based on physical intuition mathematicians have gone on to prove rigorously some of the predictions of mirror symmetry In particular the enumerative predictions of mirror symmetry have now been rigorously proven 34 Theoretical physics edit In addition to its applications in enumerative geometry mirror symmetry is a fundamental tool for doing calculations in string theory In the A model of topological string theory physically interesting quantities are expressed in terms of infinitely many numbers called Gromov Witten invariants which are extremely difficult to compute In the B model the calculations can be reduced to classical integrals and are much easier 41 By applying mirror symmetry theorists can translate difficult calculations in the A model into equivalent but technically easier calculations in the B model These calculations are then used to determine the probabilities of various physical processes in string theory Mirror symmetry can be combined with other dualities to translate calculations in one theory into equivalent calculations in a different theory By outsourcing calculations to different theories in this way theorists can calculate quantities that are impossible to calculate without the use of dualities 42 Outside of string theory mirror symmetry is used to understand aspects of quantum field theory the formalism that physicists use to describe elementary particles For example gauge theories are a class of highly symmetric physical theories appearing in the standard model of particle physics and other parts of theoretical physics Some gauge theories which are not part of the standard model but which are nevertheless important for theoretical reasons arise from strings propagating on a nearly singular background For such theories mirror symmetry is a useful computational tool 43 Indeed mirror symmetry can be used to perform calculations in an important gauge theory in four spacetime dimensions that was studied by Nathan Seiberg and Edward Witten and is also familiar in mathematics in the context of Donaldson invariants 44 There is also a generalization of mirror symmetry called 3D mirror symmetry which relates pairs of quantum field theories in three spacetime dimensions 45 Approaches editHomological mirror symmetry edit Main article Homological mirror symmetry nbsp Open strings attached to a pair of D branesIn string theory and related theories in physics a brane is a physical object that generalizes the notion of a point particle to higher dimensions For example a point particle can be viewed as a brane of dimension zero while a string can be viewed as a brane of dimension one It is also possible to consider higher dimensional branes The word brane comes from the word membrane which refers to a two dimensional brane 46 In string theory a string may be open forming a segment with two endpoints or closed forming a closed loop D branes are an important class of branes that arise when one considers open strings As an open string propagates through spacetime its endpoints are required to lie on a D brane The letter D in D brane refers to a condition that it satisfies the Dirichlet boundary condition 47 Mathematically branes can be described using the notion of a category 48 This is a mathematical structure consisting of objects and for any pair of objects a set of morphisms between them In most examples the objects are mathematical structures such as sets vector spaces or topological spaces and the morphisms are functions between these structures 49 One can also consider categories where the objects are D branes and the morphisms between two branes a displaystyle alpha nbsp and b displaystyle beta nbsp are states of open strings stretched between a displaystyle alpha nbsp and b displaystyle beta nbsp 50 In the B model of topological string theory the D branes are complex submanifolds of a Calabi Yau together with additional data that arise physically from having charges at the endpoints of strings 50 Intuitively one can think of a submanifold as a surface embedded inside the Calabi Yau although submanifolds can also exist in dimensions different from two 25 In mathematical language the category having these branes as its objects is known as the derived category of coherent sheaves on the Calabi Yau 51 In the A model the D branes can again be viewed as submanifolds of a Calabi Yau manifold Roughly speaking they are what mathematicians call special Lagrangian submanifolds 51 This means among other things that they have half the dimension of the space in which they sit and they are length area or volume minimizing 52 The category having these branes as its objects is called the Fukaya category 51 The derived category of coherent sheaves is constructed using tools from complex geometry a branch of mathematics that describes geometric curves in algebraic terms and solves geometric problems using algebraic equations 53 On the other hand the Fukaya category is constructed using symplectic geometry a branch of mathematics that arose from studies of classical physics Symplectic geometry studies spaces equipped with a symplectic form a mathematical tool that can be used to compute area in two dimensional examples 16 The homological mirror symmetry conjecture of Maxim Kontsevich states that the derived category of coherent sheaves on one Calabi Yau manifold is equivalent in a certain sense to the Fukaya category of its mirror 54 This equivalence provides a precise mathematical formulation of mirror symmetry in topological string theory In addition it provides an unexpected bridge between two branches of geometry namely complex and symplectic geometry 55 Strominger Yau Zaslow conjecture edit Main article SYZ conjecture nbsp A torus can be viewed as a union of infinitely many circles such as the red one in the picture There is one such circle for each point on the pink circle Another approach to understanding mirror symmetry was suggested by Andrew Strominger Shing Tung Yau and Eric Zaslow in 1996 19 According to their conjecture now known as the SYZ conjecture mirror symmetry can be understood by dividing a Calabi Yau manifold into simpler pieces and then transforming them to get the mirror Calabi Yau 56 The simplest example of a Calabi Yau manifold is a two dimensional torus or donut shape 57 Consider a circle on this surface that goes once through the hole of the donut An example is the red circle in the figure There are infinitely many circles like it on a torus in fact the entire surface is a union of such circles 58 One can choose an auxiliary circle B displaystyle B nbsp the pink circle in the figure such that each of the infinitely many circles decomposing the torus passes through a point of B displaystyle B nbsp This auxiliary circle is said to parametrize the circles of the decomposition meaning there is a correspondence between them and points of B displaystyle B nbsp The circle B displaystyle B nbsp is more than just a list however because it also determines how these circles are arranged on the torus This auxiliary space plays an important role in the SYZ conjecture 52 The idea of dividing a torus into pieces parametrized by an auxiliary space can be generalized Increasing the dimension from two to four real dimensions the Calabi Yau becomes a K3 surface Just as the torus was decomposed into circles a four dimensional K3 surface can be decomposed into two dimensional tori In this case the space B displaystyle B nbsp is an ordinary sphere Each point on the sphere corresponds to one of the two dimensional tori except for twenty four bad points corresponding to pinched or singular tori 52 The Calabi Yau manifolds of primary interest in string theory have six dimensions One can divide such a manifold into 3 tori three dimensional objects that generalize the notion of a torus parametrized by a 3 sphere B displaystyle B nbsp a three dimensional generalization of a sphere Each point of B displaystyle B nbsp corresponds to a 3 torus except for infinitely many bad points which form a grid like pattern of segments on the Calabi Yau and correspond to singular tori 59 Once the Calabi Yau manifold has been decomposed into simpler parts mirror symmetry can be understood in an intuitive geometric way As an example consider the torus described above Imagine that this torus represents the spacetime for a physical theory The fundamental objects of this theory will be strings propagating through the spacetime according to the rules of quantum mechanics One of the basic dualities of string theory is T duality which states that a string propagating around a circle of radius R displaystyle R nbsp is equivalent to a string propagating around a circle of radius 1 R displaystyle 1 R nbsp in the sense that all observable quantities in one description are identified with quantities in the dual description 60 For example a string has momentum as it propagates around a circle and it can also wind around the circle one or more times The number of times the string winds around a circle is called the winding number If a string has momentum p displaystyle p nbsp and winding number n displaystyle n nbsp in one description it will have momentum n displaystyle n nbsp and winding number p displaystyle p nbsp in the dual description 60 By applying T duality simultaneously to all of the circles that decompose the torus the radii of these circles become inverted and one is left with a new torus which is fatter or skinnier than the original This torus is the mirror of the original Calabi Yau 61 T duality can be extended from circles to the two dimensional tori appearing in the decomposition of a K3 surface or to the three dimensional tori appearing in the decomposition of a six dimensional Calabi Yau manifold In general the SYZ conjecture states that mirror symmetry is equivalent to the simultaneous application of T duality to these tori In each case the space B displaystyle B nbsp provides a kind of blueprint that describes how these tori are assembled into a Calabi Yau manifold 62 See also editDonaldson Thomas theory Wall crossingNotes edit The shape of a Calabi Yau manifold is described mathematically using an array of numbers called Hodge numbers The arrays corresponding to mirror Calabi Yau manifolds are different in general reflecting the different shapes of the manifolds but they are related by a certain symmetry 8 Other dualities that arise in string theory are S duality T duality and the AdS CFT correspondence For an accessible introduction to string theory see Greene 2000 Wald 1984 p 4 Zwiebach 2009 p 8 a b Yau amp Nadis 2010 Ch 6 This analogy is used for example in Greene 2000 p 186 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p ix Dixon 1988 Lerche Vafa amp Warner 1989 For more information see Yau amp Nadis 2010 pp 160 163 Aspinwall et al 2009 p 13 Hori et al 2003 p xvi Zaslow 2008 p 523 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 168 a b Hori amp Vafa 2000 a b Witten 1990 Givental 1996 1998 Lian Liu amp Yau 1997 1999a 1999b 2000 a b Zaslow 2008 p 531 a b Hori et al 2003 p xix This was first observed in Kikkawa amp Yamasaki 1984 and Sakai amp Senda 1986 a b Strominger Yau amp Zaslow 1996 Candelas et al 1985 This was observed in Dixon 1988 and Lerche Vafa amp Warner 1989 Greene amp Plesser 1990 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 158 Candelas Lynker amp Schimmrigk 1990 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 163 Candelas et al 1991 a b Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 165 Yau amp Nadis 2010 pp 169 170 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 170 Vafa 1992 Witten 1992 Hori et al 2003 p xviii Kontsevich 1995b Kontsevich 1995a Givental 1996 1998 Lian Liu amp Yau 1997 1999a 1999b 2000 a b Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 172 Aspinwall et al 2009 p vii Zaslow 2008 p 537 a b Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 166 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 167 a b Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 169 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 171 Zaslow 2008 pp 533 534 Zaslow 2008 sec 10 Hori et al 2003 p 677 Hori et al 2003 p 679 Intriligator amp Seiberg 1996 Moore 2005 p 214 Moore 2005 p 215 Aspinwall et al 2009 p page needed A basic reference on category theory is Mac Lane 1998 a b Zaslow 2008 p 536 a b c Aspinwall et al 2009 p 575 a b c Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 175 Yau amp Nadis 2010 pp 180 181 Aspinwall et al 2009 p 616 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 181 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 174 Zaslow 2008 p 533 Yau amp Nadis 2010 pp 175 176 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 175 177 a b Zaslow 2008 p 532 Yau amp Nadis 2010 p 178 Yau amp Nadis 2010 pp 178 179 References editAspinwall Paul Bridgeland Tom Craw Alastair Douglas Michael Gross Mark Kapustin Anton Moore Gregory Segal Graeme Szendroi Balazs Wilson P M H eds 2009 Dirichlet Branes and Mirror Symmetry Clay Mathematics Monographs Vol 4 American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3848 8 Candelas Philip de la Ossa Xenia Green Paul Parkes Linda 1991 A pair of Calabi Yau manifolds as an exactly soluble superconformal field theory Nuclear Physics B 359 1 21 74 Bibcode 1991NuPhB 359 21C doi 10 1016 0550 3213 91 90292 6 Candelas Philip Horowitz Gary Strominger Andrew Witten Edward 1985 Vacuum configurations for superstrings Nuclear Physics B 258 46 74 Bibcode 1985NuPhB 258 46C doi 10 1016 0550 3213 85 90602 9 Candelas Philip Lynker Monika Schimmrigk Rolf 1990 Calabi Yau manifolds in weighted P 4 displaystyle mathbb P 4 nbsp Nuclear Physics B 341 1 383 402 Bibcode 1990NuPhB 341 383C doi 10 1016 0550 3213 90 90185 G Dixon Lance 1988 Some world sheet properties of superstring compactifications on orbifolds and otherwise ICTP Ser Theoret Phys 4 67 126 ISBN 978 9971 5 0452 6 Givental Alexander 1996 Equivariant Gromov Witten invariants International Mathematics Research Notices 1996 13 613 663 doi 10 1155 S1073792896000414 S2CID 554844 Givental Alexander 1998 A mirror theorem for toric complete intersections Topological Field Theory Primitive Forms and Related Topics 141 175 arXiv alg geom 9701016 Bibcode 1998tftp conf 141G doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 0705 4 5 ISBN 978 1 4612 6874 1 S2CID 2884104 Greene Brian 2000 The Elegant Universe Superstrings Hidden Dimensions and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory Random House ISBN 978 0 9650888 0 0 Greene Brian Plesser Ronen 1990 Duality in Calabi Yau moduli space Nuclear Physics B 338 1 15 37 Bibcode 1990NuPhB 338 15G doi 10 1016 0550 3213 90 90622 K Hori Kentaro Katz Sheldon Klemm Albrecht Pandharipande Rahul Thomas Richard Vafa Cumrun Vakil Ravi Zaslow Eric eds 2003 Mirror Symmetry PDF Clay Mathematics Monographs Vol 1 American Mathematical Society ISBN 0 8218 2955 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 09 19 Hori Kentaro Vafa Cumrun 2000 Mirror Symmetry arXiv hep th 0002222 Intriligator Kenneth Seiberg Nathan 1996 Mirror symmetry in three dimensional gauge theories Physics Letters B 387 3 513 519 arXiv hep th 9607207 Bibcode 1996PhLB 387 513I doi 10 1016 0370 2693 96 01088 X S2CID 13985843 Kikkawa Keiji Yamasaki Masami 1984 Casimir effects in superstring theories Physics Letters B 149 4 357 360 Bibcode 1984PhLB 149 357K doi 10 1016 0370 2693 84 90423 4 Kontsevich Maxim 1995a Enumeration of Rational Curves Via Torus Actions The Moduli Space of Curves Birkhauser p 335 arXiv hep th 9405035 doi 10 1007 978 1 4612 4264 2 12 ISBN 978 1 4612 8714 8 S2CID 16131978 Kontsevich Maxim 1995b Homological Algebra of Mirror Symmetry Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians pp 120 139 arXiv alg geom 9411018 Bibcode 1994alg geom 11018K doi 10 1007 978 3 0348 9078 6 11 ISBN 978 3 0348 9897 3 S2CID 16733945 Lerche Wolfgang Vafa Cumrun Warner Nicholas 1989 Chiral rings in N 2 displaystyle mathcal N 2 nbsp superconformal theories PDF Nuclear Physics B 324 2 427 474 Bibcode 1989NuPhB 324 427L doi 10 1016 0550 3213 89 90474 4 S2CID 120175708 Lian Bong Liu Kefeng Yau Shing Tung 1997 Mirror principle I Asian Journal of Mathematics 1 4 729 763 arXiv alg geom 9712011 Bibcode 1997alg geom 12011L doi 10 4310 ajm 1997 v1 n4 a5 S2CID 8035522 Lian Bong Liu Kefeng Yau Shing Tung 1999a Mirror principle II Asian Journal of Mathematics 3 109 146 arXiv math 9905006 Bibcode 1999math 5006L doi 10 4310 ajm 1999 v3 n1 a6 S2CID 17837291 Lian Bong Liu Kefeng Yau Shing Tung 1999b Mirror principle III Asian Journal of Mathematics 3 4 771 800 arXiv math 9912038 Bibcode 1999math 12038L doi 10 4310 ajm 1999 v3 n4 a4 Lian Bong Liu Kefeng Yau Shing Tung 2000 Mirror principle IV Surveys in Differential Geometry 7 475 496 arXiv math 0007104 Bibcode 2000math 7104L doi 10 4310 sdg 2002 v7 n1 a15 S2CID 1099024 Mac Lane Saunders 1998 Categories for the Working Mathematician Springer ISBN 978 0 387 98403 2 Moore Gregory 2005 What is a Brane PDF Notices of the AMS 52 214 Retrieved 6 August 2016 Sakai Norisuke Senda Ikuo 1986 Vacuum energies of string compactified on torus Progress of Theoretical Physics 75 3 692 705 Bibcode 1986PThPh 75 692S doi 10 1143 PTP 75 692 Strominger Andrew Yau Shing Tung Zaslow Eric 1996 Mirror symmetry is T duality Nuclear Physics B 479 1 243 259 arXiv hep th 9606040 Bibcode 1996NuPhB 479 243S doi 10 1016 0550 3213 96 00434 8 S2CID 14586676 Vafa Cumrun 1992 Topological mirrors and quantum rings Essays on Mirror Manifolds 96 119 arXiv hep th 9111017 Bibcode 1991hep th 11017V ISBN 978 962 7670 01 8 Wald Robert 1984 General Relativity University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 87033 5 Witten Edward 1990 On the structure of the topological phase of two dimensional gravity Nuclear Physics B 340 2 3 281 332 Bibcode 1990NuPhB 340 281W doi 10 1016 0550 3213 90 90449 N Witten Edward 1992 Mirror manifolds and topological field theory Essays on Mirror Manifolds 121 160 ISBN 978 962 7670 01 8 Yau Shing Tung Nadis Steve 2010 The Shape of Inner Space String Theory and the Geometry of the Universe s Hidden Dimensions Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02023 2 Zaslow Eric 2008 Mirror Symmetry In Gowers Timothy ed The Princeton Companion to Mathematics Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11880 2 Zwiebach Barton 2009 A First Course in String Theory Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88032 9 Further reading editPopularizations edit Yau Shing Tung Nadis Steve 2010 The Shape of Inner Space String Theory and the Geometry of the Universe s Hidden Dimensions Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 02023 2 Zaslow Eric 2005 Physmatics arXiv physics 0506153 Zaslow Eric 2008 Mirror Symmetry In Gowers Timothy ed The Princeton Companion to Mathematics Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 11880 2 Textbooks edit Aspinwall Paul Bridgeland Tom Craw Alastair Douglas Michael Gross Mark Kapustin Anton Moore Gregory Segal Graeme Szendroi Balazs Wilson P M H eds 2009 Dirichlet Branes and Mirror Symmetry American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 3848 8 Cox David Katz Sheldon 1999 Mirror symmetry and algebraic geometry American Mathematical Society ISBN 978 0 8218 2127 5 Hori Kentaro Katz Sheldon Klemm Albrecht Pandharipande Rahul Thomas Richard Vafa Cumrun Vakil Ravi Zaslow Eric eds 2003 Mirror Symmetry PDF American Mathematical Society ISBN 0 8218 2955 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 09 19 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mirror symmetry string theory amp oldid 1178570778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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