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Superstring theory

Superstring theory is an attempt to explain all of the particles and fundamental forces of nature in one theory by modeling them as vibrations of tiny supersymmetric strings.

'Superstring theory' is a shorthand for supersymmetric string theory because unlike bosonic string theory, it is the version of string theory that accounts for both fermions and bosons and incorporates supersymmetry to model gravity.

Since the second superstring revolution, the five superstring theories (Type I, Type IIA, Type IIB, HO and HE) are regarded as different limits of a single theory tentatively called M-theory.

Background edit

One of the deepest open problems in theoretical physics is formulating a theory of quantum gravity. Such a theory incorporates both the theory of general relativity, which describes gravitation and applies to large-scale structures, and quantum mechanics or more specifically quantum field theory, which describes the other three fundamental forces that act on the atomic scale.

Quantum field theory, in particular the Standard model, is currently the most successful theory to describe fundamental forces, but while computing physical quantities of interest, naïvely one obtains infinite values. Physicists developed the technique of renormalization to 'eliminate these infinities' to obtain finite values which can be experimentally tested. This technique works for three of the four fundamental forces: Electromagnetism, the strong force and the weak force, but does not work for gravity, which is non-renormalizable. Development of a quantum theory of gravity therefore requires different means than those used for the other forces.[1]

According to superstring theory, or more generally string theory, the fundamental constituents of reality are strings with radius on the order of the Planck length (about 10−33 cm). An appealing feature of string theory is that fundamental particles can be viewed as excitations of the string. The tension in a string is on the order of the Planck force (1044 newtons). The graviton (the proposed messenger particle of the gravitational force) is predicted by the theory to be a string with wave amplitude zero.

History edit

Investigating how a string theory may include fermions in its spectrum led to the invention of supersymmetry (in the West[clarification needed])[2] in 1971,[3] a mathematical transformation between bosons and fermions. String theories that include fermionic vibrations are now known as "superstring theories".

Since its beginnings in the seventies and through the combined efforts of many different researchers, superstring theory has developed into a broad and varied subject with connections to quantum gravity, particle and condensed matter physics, cosmology, and pure mathematics.

Absence of physical evidence edit

Superstring theory is based on supersymmetry. No supersymmetric particles have been discovered and initial investigation, carried out in 2011 at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC)[4] and in 2006 at the Tevatron has excluded some of the ranges.[5][self-published source?][6][7][8] For instance, the mass constraint of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model squarks has been up to 1.1 TeV, and gluinos up to 500 GeV.[9] No report on suggesting large extra dimensions has been delivered from LHC. There have been no principles so far to limit the number of vacua in the concept of a landscape of vacua.[10]

Some particle physicists became disappointed by the lack of experimental verification of supersymmetry, and some have already discarded it.[11] Jon Butterworth at University College London said that we had no sign of supersymmetry, even in higher energy region, excluding the superpartners of the top quark up to a few TeV. Ben Allanach at the University of Cambridge states that if we do not discover any new particles in the next trial at the LHC, then we can say it is unlikely to discover supersymmetry at CERN in the foreseeable future.[11]

Extra dimensions edit

Our physical space is observed to have three large spatial dimensions and, along with time, is a boundless 4-dimensional continuum known as spacetime. However, nothing prevents a theory from including more than 4 dimensions. In the case of string theory, consistency requires spacetime to have 10 dimensions (3D regular space + 1 time + 6D hyperspace).[12] The fact that we see only 3 dimensions of space can be explained by one of two mechanisms: either the extra dimensions are compactified on a very small scale, or else our world may live on a 3-dimensional submanifold corresponding to a brane, on which all known particles besides gravity would be restricted.

If the extra dimensions are compactified, then the extra 6 dimensions must be in the form of a Calabi–Yau manifold. Within the more complete framework of M-theory, they would have to take form of a G2 manifold. A particular exact symmetry of string/M-theory called T-duality (which exchanges momentum modes for winding number and sends compact dimensions of radius R to radius 1/R),[13] has led to the discovery of equivalences between different Calabi–Yau manifolds called mirror symmetry.

Superstring theory is not the first theory to propose extra spatial dimensions. It can be seen as building upon the Kaluza–Klein theory, which proposed a 4+1 dimensional (5D) theory of gravity. When compactified on a circle, the gravity in the extra dimension precisely describes electromagnetism from the perspective of the 3 remaining large space dimensions. Thus the original Kaluza–Klein theory is a prototype for the unification of gauge and gravity interactions, at least at the classical level, however it is known to be insufficient to describe nature for a variety of reasons (missing weak and strong forces, lack of parity violation, etc.) A more complex compact geometry is needed to reproduce the known gauge forces. Also, to obtain a consistent, fundamental, quantum theory requires the upgrade to string theory, not just the extra dimensions.

Number of superstring theories edit

Theoretical physicists were troubled by the existence of five separate superstring theories. A possible solution for this dilemma was suggested at the beginning of what is called the second superstring revolution in the 1990s, which suggests that the five string theories might be different limits of a single underlying theory, called M-theory. This remains a conjecture.[14]

String theories
Type Spacetime dimensions SUSY generators chiral open strings heterotic compactification gauge group tachyon
Bosonic (closed) 26 N = 0 no no no none yes
Bosonic (open) 26 N = 0 no yes no U(1) yes
I 10 N = (1,0) yes yes no SO(32) no
IIA 10 N = (1,1) no no no U(1) no
IIB 10 N = (2,0) yes no no none no
HO 10 N = (1,0) yes no yes SO(32) no
HE 10 N = (1,0) yes no yes E8 × E8 no
M-theory 11 N = 1 no no no none no

The five consistent superstring theories are:

  • The type I string has one supersymmetry in the ten-dimensional sense (16 supercharges). This theory is special in the sense that it is based on unoriented open and closed strings, while the rest are based on oriented closed strings.
  • The type II string theories have two supersymmetries in the ten-dimensional sense (32 supercharges). There are actually two kinds of type II strings called type IIA and type IIB. They differ mainly in the fact that the IIA theory is non-chiral (parity conserving) while the IIB theory is chiral (parity violating).
  • The heterotic string theories are based on a peculiar hybrid of a type I superstring and a bosonic string. There are two kinds of heterotic strings differing in their ten-dimensional gauge groups: the heterotic E8×E8 string and the heterotic SO(32) string. (The name heterotic SO(32) is slightly inaccurate since among the SO(32) Lie groups, string theory singles out a quotient Spin(32)/Z2 that is not equivalent to SO(32).)

Chiral gauge theories can be inconsistent due to anomalies. This happens when certain one-loop Feynman diagrams cause a quantum mechanical breakdown of the gauge symmetry. The anomalies were canceled out via the Green–Schwarz mechanism.

Even though there are only five superstring theories, making detailed predictions for real experiments requires information about exactly what physical configuration the theory is in. This considerably complicates efforts to test string theory because there is an astronomically high number—10500 or more—of configurations that meet some of the basic requirements to be consistent with our world. Along with the extreme remoteness of the Planck scale, this is the other major reason it is hard to test superstring theory.

Another approach to the number of superstring theories refers to the mathematical structure called composition algebra. In the findings of abstract algebra there are just seven composition algebras over the field of real numbers. In 1990 physicists R. Foot and G.C. Joshi in Australia stated that "the seven classical superstring theories are in one-to-one correspondence to the seven composition algebras".[15]

Integrating general relativity and quantum mechanics edit

General relativity typically deals with situations involving large mass objects in fairly large regions of spacetime whereas quantum mechanics is generally reserved for scenarios at the atomic scale (small spacetime regions). The two are very rarely used together, and the most common case that combines them is in the study of black holes. Having peak density, or the maximum amount of matter possible in a space, and very small area, the two must be used in synchrony to predict conditions in such places. Yet, when used together, the equations fall apart, spitting out impossible answers, such as imaginary distances and less than one dimension.

The major problem with their incongruence is that, at Planck scale (a fundamental small unit of length) lengths, general relativity predicts a smooth, flowing surface, while quantum mechanics predicts a random, warped surface, which are nowhere near compatible. Superstring theory resolves this issue, replacing the classical idea of point particles with strings. These strings have an average diameter of the Planck length, with extremely small variances, which completely ignores the quantum mechanical predictions of Planck-scale length dimensional warping. Also, these surfaces can be mapped as branes. These branes can be viewed as objects with a morphism between them. In this case, the morphism will be the state of a string that stretches between brane A and brane B.

Singularities are avoided because the observed consequences of "Big Crunches" never reach zero size. In fact, should the universe begin a "big crunch" sort of process, string theory dictates that the universe could never be smaller than the size of one string, at which point it would actually begin expanding.

Mathematics edit

D-branes edit

D-branes are membrane-like objects in 10D string theory. They can be thought of as occurring as a result of a Kaluza–Klein compactification of 11D M-theory that contains membranes. Because compactification of a geometric theory produces extra vector fields the D-branes can be included in the action by adding an extra U(1) vector field to the string action.

 

In type I open string theory, the ends of open strings are always attached to D-brane surfaces. A string theory with more gauge fields such as SU(2) gauge fields would then correspond to the compactification of some higher-dimensional theory above 11 dimensions, which is not thought to be possible to date. Furthermore, the tachyons attached to the D-branes show the instability of those D-branes with respect to the annihilation. The tachyon total energy is (or reflects) the total energy of the D-branes.

Why five superstring theories? edit

For a 10 dimensional supersymmetric theory we are allowed a 32-component Majorana spinor. This can be decomposed into a pair of 16-component Majorana-Weyl (chiral) spinors. There are then various ways to construct an invariant depending on whether these two spinors have the same or opposite chiralities:

Superstring model Invariant
Heterotic  
IIA  
IIB  

The heterotic superstrings come in two types SO(32) and E8×E8 as indicated above and the type I superstrings include open strings.

Beyond superstring theory edit

It is conceivable that the five superstring theories are approximated to a theory in higher dimensions possibly involving membranes. Because the action for this involves quartic terms and higher so is not Gaussian, the functional integrals are very difficult to solve and so this has confounded the top theoretical physicists. Edward Witten has popularised the concept of a theory in 11 dimensions, called M-theory, involving membranes interpolating from the known symmetries of superstring theory. It may turn out that there exist membrane models or other non-membrane models in higher dimensions—which may become acceptable when we find new unknown symmetries of nature, such as noncommutative geometry. It is thought, however, that 16 is probably the maximum since SO(16) is a maximal subgroup of E8, the largest exceptional Lie group, and also is more than large enough to contain the Standard Model. Quartic integrals of the non-functional kind are easier to solve so there is hope for the future. This is the series solution, which is always convergent when a is non-zero and negative:

 

In the case of membranes the series would correspond to sums of various membrane interactions that are not seen in string theory.

Compactification edit

Investigating theories of higher dimensions often involves looking at the 10 dimensional superstring theory and interpreting some of the more obscure results in terms of compactified dimensions. For example, D-branes are seen as compactified membranes from 11D M-theory. Theories of higher dimensions such as 12D F-theory and beyond produce other effects, such as gauge terms higher than U(1). The components of the extra vector fields (A) in the D-brane actions can be thought of as extra coordinates (X) in disguise. However, the known symmetries including supersymmetry currently restrict the spinors to 32-components—which limits the number of dimensions to 11 (or 12 if you include two time dimensions.) Some physicists (e.g., John Baez et al.) have speculated that the exceptional Lie groups E6, E7 and E8 having maximum orthogonal subgroups SO(10), SO(12) and SO(16) may be related to theories in 10, 12 and 16 dimensions; 10 dimensions corresponding to string theory and the 12 and 16 dimensional theories being yet undiscovered but would be theories based on 3-branes and 7-branes respectively. However, this is a minority view within the string community. Since E7 is in some sense F4 quaternified and E8 is F4 octonified, the 12 and 16 dimensional theories, if they did exist, may involve the noncommutative geometry based on the quaternions and octonions respectively. From the above discussion, it can be seen that physicists have many ideas for extending superstring theory beyond the current 10 dimensional theory, but so far all have been unsuccessful.

Kac–Moody algebras edit

Since strings can have an infinite number of modes, the symmetry used to describe string theory is based on infinite dimensional Lie algebras. Some Kac–Moody algebras that have been considered as symmetries for M-theory have been E10 and E11 and their supersymmetric extensions.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Polchinski, Joseph. String Theory: Volume I. Cambridge University Press, p. 4.
  2. ^ Rickles, Dean (2014). A Brief History of String Theory: From Dual Models to M-Theory. Springer, p. 104. ISBN 978-3-642-45128-7
  3. ^ J. L. Gervais and B. Sakita worked on the two-dimensional case in which they use the concept of "supergauge," taken from Ramond, Neveu, and Schwarz's work on dual models: Gervais, J.-L.; Sakita, B. (1971). "Field theory interpretation of supergauges in dual models". Nuclear Physics B. 34 (2): 632–639. Bibcode:1971NuPhB..34..632G. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(71)90351-8.
  4. ^ Buchmueller, O.; Cavanaugh, R.; Colling, D.; De Roeck, A.; Dolan, M. J.; Ellis, J. R.; Flächer, H.; Heinemeyer, S.; Isidori, G.; Olive, K.; Rogerson, S.; Ronga, F.; Weiglein, G. (May 2011). "Implications of initial LHC searches for supersymmetry". The European Physical Journal C. 71 (5): 1634. arXiv:1102.4585. Bibcode:2011EPJC...71.1634B. doi:10.1140/epjc/s10052-011-1634-1. S2CID 52026092.
  5. ^ Woit, Peter (February 22, 2011). "Implications of Initial LHC Searches for Supersymmetry".
  6. ^ Cassel, S.; Ghilencea, D. M.; Kraml, S.; Lessa, A.; Ross, G. G. (2011). "Fine-tuning implications for complementary dark matter and LHC SUSY searches". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2011 (5): 120. arXiv:1101.4664. Bibcode:2011JHEP...05..120C. doi:10.1007/JHEP05(2011)120. S2CID 53467362.
  7. ^ Falkowski, Adam (Jester) (February 16, 2011). "What LHC tells about SUSY". resonaances.blogspot.com. from the original on March 22, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
  8. ^ Tapper, Alex (24 March 2010). "Early SUSY searches at the LHC" (PDF). Imperial College London.
  9. ^ CMS Collaboration (2011). "Search for Supersymmetry at the LHC in Events with Jets and Missing Transverse Energy". Physical Review Letters. 107 (22): 221804. arXiv:1109.2352. Bibcode:2011PhRvL.107v1804C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.221804. PMID 22182023. S2CID 22498269.
  10. ^ Shifman, M. (2012). "Frontiers Beyond the Standard Model: Reflections and Impressionistic Portrait of the Conference". Modern Physics Letters A. 27 (40): 1230043. Bibcode:2012MPLA...2730043S. doi:10.1142/S0217732312300431.
  11. ^ a b Jha, Alok (August 6, 2013). "One year on from the Higgs boson find, has physics hit the buffers?". The Guardian. photograph: Harold Cunningham/Getty Images. London: GMG. ISSN 0261-3077. OCLC 60623878. from the original on March 22, 2014. Retrieved March 22, 2014.
  12. ^ The D = 10 critical dimension was originally discovered by John H. Schwarz in Schwarz, J. H. (1972). "Physical states and pomeron poles in the dual pion model". Nuclear Physics, B46(1), 61–74.
  13. ^ Polchinski, Joseph. String Theory: Volume I. Cambridge University Press, p. 247.
  14. ^ Polchinski, Joseph. String Theory: Volume II. Cambridge University Press, p. 198.
  15. ^ Foot, R.; Joshi, G. C. (1990). "Nonstandard signature of spacetime, superstrings, and the split composition algebras". Letters in Mathematical Physics. 19 (1): 65–71. Bibcode:1990LMaPh..19...65F. doi:10.1007/BF00402262. S2CID 120143992.

Cited sources edit

  • Polchinski, Joseph (1998). String Theory Vol. 1: An Introduction to the Bosonic String. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63303-1.
  • Polchinski, Joseph (1998). String Theory Vol. 2: Superstring Theory and Beyond. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63304-8.

superstring, theory, superstring, redirects, here, converse, relation, substring, superstring, formal, languages, bundle, firecrackers, superstring, fireworks, album, carter, super, strings, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, he. Superstring redirects here For the converse relation of substring see Superstring formal languages For the bundle of firecrackers see Superstring fireworks For the album by Ron Carter see Super Strings This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Superstring theory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Superstring theory is an attempt to explain all of the particles and fundamental forces of nature in one theory by modeling them as vibrations of tiny supersymmetric strings Superstring theory is a shorthand for supersymmetric string theory because unlike bosonic string theory it is the version of string theory that accounts for both fermions and bosons and incorporates supersymmetry to model gravity Since the second superstring revolution the five superstring theories Type I Type IIA Type IIB HO and HE are regarded as different limits of a single theory tentatively called M theory Contents 1 Background 2 History 3 Absence of physical evidence 4 Extra dimensions 5 Number of superstring theories 6 Integrating general relativity and quantum mechanics 7 Mathematics 7 1 D branes 7 2 Why five superstring theories 8 Beyond superstring theory 8 1 Compactification 8 2 Kac Moody algebras 9 See also 10 References 11 Cited sourcesBackground editOne of the deepest open problems in theoretical physics is formulating a theory of quantum gravity Such a theory incorporates both the theory of general relativity which describes gravitation and applies to large scale structures and quantum mechanics or more specifically quantum field theory which describes the other three fundamental forces that act on the atomic scale Quantum field theory in particular the Standard model is currently the most successful theory to describe fundamental forces but while computing physical quantities of interest naively one obtains infinite values Physicists developed the technique of renormalization to eliminate these infinities to obtain finite values which can be experimentally tested This technique works for three of the four fundamental forces Electromagnetism the strong force and the weak force but does not work for gravity which is non renormalizable Development of a quantum theory of gravity therefore requires different means than those used for the other forces 1 According to superstring theory or more generally string theory the fundamental constituents of reality are strings with radius on the order of the Planck length about 10 33 cm An appealing feature of string theory is that fundamental particles can be viewed as excitations of the string The tension in a string is on the order of the Planck force 1044 newtons The graviton the proposed messenger particle of the gravitational force is predicted by the theory to be a string with wave amplitude zero History editMain article History of string theory Investigating how a string theory may include fermions in its spectrum led to the invention of supersymmetry in the West clarification needed 2 in 1971 3 a mathematical transformation between bosons and fermions String theories that include fermionic vibrations are now known as superstring theories Since its beginnings in the seventies and through the combined efforts of many different researchers superstring theory has developed into a broad and varied subject with connections to quantum gravity particle and condensed matter physics cosmology and pure mathematics Absence of physical evidence editSuperstring theory is based on supersymmetry No supersymmetric particles have been discovered and initial investigation carried out in 2011 at the Large Hadron Collider LHC 4 and in 2006 at the Tevatron has excluded some of the ranges 5 self published source 6 7 8 For instance the mass constraint of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model squarks has been up to 1 1 TeV and gluinos up to 500 GeV 9 No report on suggesting large extra dimensions has been delivered from LHC There have been no principles so far to limit the number of vacua in the concept of a landscape of vacua 10 Some particle physicists became disappointed by the lack of experimental verification of supersymmetry and some have already discarded it 11 Jon Butterworth at University College London said that we had no sign of supersymmetry even in higher energy region excluding the superpartners of the top quark up to a few TeV Ben Allanach at the University of Cambridge states that if we do not discover any new particles in the next trial at the LHC then we can say it is unlikely to discover supersymmetry at CERN in the foreseeable future 11 Extra dimensions editSee also String theory Extra dimensions Our physical space is observed to have three large spatial dimensions and along with time is a boundless 4 dimensional continuum known as spacetime However nothing prevents a theory from including more than 4 dimensions In the case of string theory consistency requires spacetime to have 10 dimensions 3D regular space 1 time 6D hyperspace 12 The fact that we see only 3 dimensions of space can be explained by one of two mechanisms either the extra dimensions are compactified on a very small scale or else our world may live on a 3 dimensional submanifold corresponding to a brane on which all known particles besides gravity would be restricted If the extra dimensions are compactified then the extra 6 dimensions must be in the form of a Calabi Yau manifold Within the more complete framework of M theory they would have to take form of a G2 manifold A particular exact symmetry of string M theory called T duality which exchanges momentum modes for winding number and sends compact dimensions of radius R to radius 1 R 13 has led to the discovery of equivalences between different Calabi Yau manifolds called mirror symmetry Superstring theory is not the first theory to propose extra spatial dimensions It can be seen as building upon the Kaluza Klein theory which proposed a 4 1 dimensional 5D theory of gravity When compactified on a circle the gravity in the extra dimension precisely describes electromagnetism from the perspective of the 3 remaining large space dimensions Thus the original Kaluza Klein theory is a prototype for the unification of gauge and gravity interactions at least at the classical level however it is known to be insufficient to describe nature for a variety of reasons missing weak and strong forces lack of parity violation etc A more complex compact geometry is needed to reproduce the known gauge forces Also to obtain a consistent fundamental quantum theory requires the upgrade to string theory not just the extra dimensions Number of superstring theories editTheoretical physicists were troubled by the existence of five separate superstring theories A possible solution for this dilemma was suggested at the beginning of what is called the second superstring revolution in the 1990s which suggests that the five string theories might be different limits of a single underlying theory called M theory This remains a conjecture 14 String theoriesType Spacetime dimensions SUSY generators chiral open strings heterotic compactification gauge group tachyonBosonic closed 26 N 0 no no no none yesBosonic open 26 N 0 no yes no U 1 yesI 10 N 1 0 yes yes no SO 32 noIIA 10 N 1 1 no no no U 1 noIIB 10 N 2 0 yes no no none noHO 10 N 1 0 yes no yes SO 32 noHE 10 N 1 0 yes no yes E8 E8 noM theory 11 N 1 no no no none noThe five consistent superstring theories are The type I string has one supersymmetry in the ten dimensional sense 16 supercharges This theory is special in the sense that it is based on unoriented open and closed strings while the rest are based on oriented closed strings The type II string theories have two supersymmetries in the ten dimensional sense 32 supercharges There are actually two kinds of type II strings called type IIA and type IIB They differ mainly in the fact that the IIA theory is non chiral parity conserving while the IIB theory is chiral parity violating The heterotic string theories are based on a peculiar hybrid of a type I superstring and a bosonic string There are two kinds of heterotic strings differing in their ten dimensional gauge groups the heterotic E8 E8 string and the heterotic SO 32 string The name heterotic SO 32 is slightly inaccurate since among the SO 32 Lie groups string theory singles out a quotient Spin 32 Z2 that is not equivalent to SO 32 Chiral gauge theories can be inconsistent due to anomalies This happens when certain one loop Feynman diagrams cause a quantum mechanical breakdown of the gauge symmetry The anomalies were canceled out via the Green Schwarz mechanism Even though there are only five superstring theories making detailed predictions for real experiments requires information about exactly what physical configuration the theory is in This considerably complicates efforts to test string theory because there is an astronomically high number 10500 or more of configurations that meet some of the basic requirements to be consistent with our world Along with the extreme remoteness of the Planck scale this is the other major reason it is hard to test superstring theory Another approach to the number of superstring theories refers to the mathematical structure called composition algebra In the findings of abstract algebra there are just seven composition algebras over the field of real numbers In 1990 physicists R Foot and G C Joshi in Australia stated that the seven classical superstring theories are in one to one correspondence to the seven composition algebras 15 Integrating general relativity and quantum mechanics editGeneral relativity typically deals with situations involving large mass objects in fairly large regions of spacetime whereas quantum mechanics is generally reserved for scenarios at the atomic scale small spacetime regions The two are very rarely used together and the most common case that combines them is in the study of black holes Having peak density or the maximum amount of matter possible in a space and very small area the two must be used in synchrony to predict conditions in such places Yet when used together the equations fall apart spitting out impossible answers such as imaginary distances and less than one dimension The major problem with their incongruence is that at Planck scale a fundamental small unit of length lengths general relativity predicts a smooth flowing surface while quantum mechanics predicts a random warped surface which are nowhere near compatible Superstring theory resolves this issue replacing the classical idea of point particles with strings These strings have an average diameter of the Planck length with extremely small variances which completely ignores the quantum mechanical predictions of Planck scale length dimensional warping Also these surfaces can be mapped as branes These branes can be viewed as objects with a morphism between them In this case the morphism will be the state of a string that stretches between brane A and brane B Singularities are avoided because the observed consequences of Big Crunches never reach zero size In fact should the universe begin a big crunch sort of process string theory dictates that the universe could never be smaller than the size of one string at which point it would actually begin expanding Mathematics editD branes edit D branes are membrane like objects in 10D string theory They can be thought of as occurring as a result of a Kaluza Klein compactification of 11D M theory that contains membranes Because compactification of a geometric theory produces extra vector fields the D branes can be included in the action by adding an extra U 1 vector field to the string action z z i A z z z displaystyle partial z rightarrow partial z iA z z overline z nbsp In type I open string theory the ends of open strings are always attached to D brane surfaces A string theory with more gauge fields such as SU 2 gauge fields would then correspond to the compactification of some higher dimensional theory above 11 dimensions which is not thought to be possible to date Furthermore the tachyons attached to the D branes show the instability of those D branes with respect to the annihilation The tachyon total energy is or reflects the total energy of the D branes Why five superstring theories edit For a 10 dimensional supersymmetric theory we are allowed a 32 component Majorana spinor This can be decomposed into a pair of 16 component Majorana Weyl chiral spinors There are then various ways to construct an invariant depending on whether these two spinors have the same or opposite chiralities Superstring model InvariantHeterotic z X m i 8 L G m z 8 L displaystyle partial z X mu i overline theta L Gamma mu partial z theta L nbsp IIA z X m i 8 L G m z 8 L i 8 R G m z 8 R displaystyle partial z X mu i overline theta L Gamma mu partial z theta L i overline theta R Gamma mu partial z theta R nbsp IIB z X m i 8 L 1 G m z 8 L 1 i 8 L 2 G m z 8 L 2 displaystyle partial z X mu i overline theta L 1 Gamma mu partial z theta L 1 i overline theta L 2 Gamma mu partial z theta L 2 nbsp The heterotic superstrings come in two types SO 32 and E8 E8 as indicated above and the type I superstrings include open strings Beyond superstring theory editIt is conceivable that the five superstring theories are approximated to a theory in higher dimensions possibly involving membranes Because the action for this involves quartic terms and higher so is not Gaussian the functional integrals are very difficult to solve and so this has confounded the top theoretical physicists Edward Witten has popularised the concept of a theory in 11 dimensions called M theory involving membranes interpolating from the known symmetries of superstring theory It may turn out that there exist membrane models or other non membrane models in higher dimensions which may become acceptable when we find new unknown symmetries of nature such as noncommutative geometry It is thought however that 16 is probably the maximum since SO 16 is a maximal subgroup of E8 the largest exceptional Lie group and also is more than large enough to contain the Standard Model Quartic integrals of the non functional kind are easier to solve so there is hope for the future This is the series solution which is always convergent when a is non zero and negative exp a x 4 b x 3 c x 2 d x f d x e f n m p 0 b 4 n 4 n c 2 m 2 m d 4 p 4 p G 3 n m p 1 4 a 3 n m p 1 4 displaystyle int infty infty exp ax 4 bx 3 cx 2 dx f dx e f sum n m p 0 infty frac b 4n 4n frac c 2m 2m frac d 4p 4p frac Gamma 3n m p frac 1 4 a 3n m p frac 1 4 nbsp In the case of membranes the series would correspond to sums of various membrane interactions that are not seen in string theory Compactification edit Investigating theories of higher dimensions often involves looking at the 10 dimensional superstring theory and interpreting some of the more obscure results in terms of compactified dimensions For example D branes are seen as compactified membranes from 11D M theory Theories of higher dimensions such as 12D F theory and beyond produce other effects such as gauge terms higher than U 1 The components of the extra vector fields A in the D brane actions can be thought of as extra coordinates X in disguise However the known symmetries including supersymmetry currently restrict the spinors to 32 components which limits the number of dimensions to 11 or 12 if you include two time dimensions Some physicists e g John Baez et al have speculated that the exceptional Lie groups E6 E7 and E8 having maximum orthogonal subgroups SO 10 SO 12 and SO 16 may be related to theories in 10 12 and 16 dimensions 10 dimensions corresponding to string theory and the 12 and 16 dimensional theories being yet undiscovered but would be theories based on 3 branes and 7 branes respectively However this is a minority view within the string community Since E7 is in some sense F4 quaternified and E8 is F4 octonified the 12 and 16 dimensional theories if they did exist may involve the noncommutative geometry based on the quaternions and octonions respectively From the above discussion it can be seen that physicists have many ideas for extending superstring theory beyond the current 10 dimensional theory but so far all have been unsuccessful Kac Moody algebras edit Since strings can have an infinite number of modes the symmetry used to describe string theory is based on infinite dimensional Lie algebras Some Kac Moody algebras that have been considered as symmetries for M theory have been E10 and E11 and their supersymmetric extensions See also edit nbsp Physics portalAdS CFT correspondence dS CFT correspondence Grand unification theory List of string theory topics String field theoryReferences edit Polchinski Joseph String Theory Volume I Cambridge University Press p 4 Rickles Dean 2014 A Brief History of String Theory From Dual Models to M Theory Springer p 104 ISBN 978 3 642 45128 7 J L Gervais and B Sakita worked on the two dimensional case in which they use the concept of supergauge taken from Ramond Neveu and Schwarz s work on dual models Gervais J L Sakita B 1971 Field theory interpretation of supergauges in dual models Nuclear Physics B 34 2 632 639 Bibcode 1971NuPhB 34 632G doi 10 1016 0550 3213 71 90351 8 Buchmueller O Cavanaugh R Colling D De Roeck A Dolan M J Ellis J R Flacher H Heinemeyer S Isidori G Olive K Rogerson S Ronga F Weiglein G May 2011 Implications of initial LHC searches for supersymmetry The European Physical Journal C 71 5 1634 arXiv 1102 4585 Bibcode 2011EPJC 71 1634B doi 10 1140 epjc s10052 011 1634 1 S2CID 52026092 Woit Peter February 22 2011 Implications of Initial LHC Searches for Supersymmetry Cassel S Ghilencea D M Kraml S Lessa A Ross G G 2011 Fine tuning implications for complementary dark matter and LHC SUSY searches Journal of High Energy Physics 2011 5 120 arXiv 1101 4664 Bibcode 2011JHEP 05 120C doi 10 1007 JHEP05 2011 120 S2CID 53467362 Falkowski Adam Jester February 16 2011 What LHC tells about SUSY resonaances blogspot com Archived from the original on March 22 2014 Retrieved March 22 2014 Tapper Alex 24 March 2010 Early SUSY searches at the LHC PDF Imperial College London CMS Collaboration 2011 Search for Supersymmetry at the LHC in Events with Jets and Missing Transverse Energy Physical Review Letters 107 22 221804 arXiv 1109 2352 Bibcode 2011PhRvL 107v1804C doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 107 221804 PMID 22182023 S2CID 22498269 Shifman M 2012 Frontiers Beyond the Standard Model Reflections and Impressionistic Portrait of the Conference Modern Physics Letters A 27 40 1230043 Bibcode 2012MPLA 2730043S doi 10 1142 S0217732312300431 a b Jha Alok August 6 2013 One year on from the Higgs boson find has physics hit the buffers The Guardian photograph Harold Cunningham Getty Images London GMG ISSN 0261 3077 OCLC 60623878 Archived from the original on March 22 2014 Retrieved March 22 2014 The D 10 critical dimension was originally discovered by John H Schwarz in Schwarz J H 1972 Physical states and pomeron poles in the dual pion model Nuclear Physics B46 1 61 74 Polchinski Joseph String Theory Volume I Cambridge University Press p 247 Polchinski Joseph String Theory Volume II Cambridge University Press p 198 Foot R Joshi G C 1990 Nonstandard signature of spacetime superstrings and the split composition algebras Letters in Mathematical Physics 19 1 65 71 Bibcode 1990LMaPh 19 65F doi 10 1007 BF00402262 S2CID 120143992 Cited sources editPolchinski Joseph 1998 String Theory Vol 1 An Introduction to the Bosonic String Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63303 1 Polchinski Joseph 1998 String Theory Vol 2 Superstring Theory and Beyond Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63304 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Superstring theory amp oldid 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