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An Outline of An Outline of String TheoryString Theory
Miao Li
Institute of Theoretical PhysicsBeijing, China
Contents
I. Background
II. Elements of string theory
III. Branes in string theory
IV. Black holes in string theory-holography-Maldacena’s conjecture
I. Background
1. The world viewed by a reductionist
Let’s start from where Feynman’s lecture starts
A drop of water enlarged 10^9times
H
O
Feynman was able to deduce a lot of things
from a single sentence:
All forms of matter consist of atoms. 1. Qualitative properties of gas,
liquid…
2. Evaporation, heat transport (to cool your
Soup, blow it)
3. Understanding of sounds, waves…
Atomic structure
H:
10^{-8}cm
Theory: QED (including Lamb shift)
Interaction strength:
Electron, point-like
Nucleus 10^{-13} cm
Dirac:
QED explains all of chemistry and most of
physics.
Periodic table of elements, chemical reactions,
superconductors, some of biology.
Sub-atomic structure
Nucleus of H=proton
u=2/3 U(1), d=-1/3 U(1), in addition, colors of SU(3)
u
ud
Neutron:
Interaction strengths
QEDSize of H=Compton length of electron/α=
d
u d
Strong interaction
Size of proton=Compton length of quark/
So the strong interactions are truly strong,
perturbative methods fail.QCD is Still unsolved
Another subatomic force: weak interaction
β-decay
How strong (or how weak) is weak interaction?
Depends on the situation. For quarks:
-mass of u-quark -mass of W-boson
Finally, gravity, the weakest of all four interactions
-mass of proton -Planck mass
(so )
Summary:
Strong interaction-SU(3) Yang-Mills
Electromagnetic
Weak interaction SU(2)XU(1)
Gravity
To asses the possibility of unification, let’s
Take a look at
2. A brief history of amalgamation of physical
theories.
Movement of earthly bodies. Movement of celestial bodies.
Newtonian mechanics + universal gravitation.
17th century.
Mechanics Heat, thermodynamics
Atomic theory, statistical mechanics ofMaxwell, Boltzmann, Gibbs, 19th century.
Electrodynamics Magnetism Light, X-rays, γ-rays
Faraday, Maxwell, 19th century.
Quantum electrodynamics Weak interaction
Semi-unification, Weinberg-Salam model.The disparity between 10^{-2} and
10^{-6}is solved by symmetry breaking in gaugetheory.
1960’s-1970’s
(`t Hooft, Veltman, Nobel prize in 1999, total
Five Nobel medals for this unification.)
Although eletro-weak, strong interaction appear as different forces, they are
governed by the same universal principle:
Quantum mechanics or betterQantum field theory
valid up to
Further, there is evidence for unification of
3 forces:
(a) In 4 dimensions,
goes up with E goes down with E
(b) runs as powers of E if there are large compact dimensions ( )
3. Difficulty with gravity
Gravity, the first ever discovered interaction,
has resisted being put into the framework of
quantum field theory.
So, we have a great opportunity here!
Why gravity is different?
There are many aspects, here is a few.
(a) The mediation particle has spin 2.
Thus
amplitude=
The next order to the Born approximation
amplitude=
(b) According to Einstein theory, gravity is geometry. If geometry fluctuates violently,
causal structure is lost.
(c) The existence of black holes.
(c1) The failure of classical geometry.
singularity
(c2) A black hole has a finite entropy, or a state of a black hole can not be specified by
what is observed outside.
Hawking radiation, is quantum coherence lost?
Curiously, the interaction strength at thehorizon is not .
The larger the BH, the weak the interaction.
GR predicts the surface gravity be
Curiously,
Size of black hole=Compton length/
or
To summarize, the present day’s accepted
picture of our fundamental theory is
4. The emergence of string theory
A little history
Strong interaction is described by QCD, however, the dual resonance model wasinvented to describe strong interaction
first, and eventually became a candidate of
theoryof quantum gravity.
Initially, there appeared infinitely many resonant states ( π,ρ,ω…)
None of the resonant states appears more
fundamental than others. In calculating an
amplitude, we need to sum up all intermediate
states:
π π π π = Σ n
π π π πDenote this amplitude by A(s,t) :
(a)
(b) Analytically extend A(s,t) to the complex plane of s, t, we must have
Namely
Σ n = Σ n
This is the famous s-t channel duality.
A simple formula satisfying (a) and (b) is the
famous Veneziano amplitude
polynomial in t: Σ t^J, J-spin of the intermediate
state
linear trajectory
This remarkable formula leads us to
String theory
For simplicity, consider open strings (to which
Veneziano amplitude corresponds)
Ground state v=c
v=c
An excited state v=c v=c
To calculate the spectrum of the excited states,
We look at a simple situation (Neuman->Dirichlet)
x
σ
x
σ
Let the tension of the string be T, according to
Heisenberg uncertainty relation
Now
or
If , then
Casimir effect
The above derivation ignores factors such as
2’s, π’s. More generally, there can be
We discovered the linear trajectory.
Morals:
(a)There are infinitely many massive states resulting from a single string (Q.M. is essential)
(b)If we have only “bosonic strings”, no internal colors, we can have only integral spins.
spin 1: gauge bosons spin 2: graviton
(c) To have a massless gauge boson, a=-1. To have a
massless graviton, a=-2 (need to use closed strings).
II. Elements of string theory
1. First quantized strings, Feynman rules
Particle analogue Action
A classical particle travels along the shortest
path, while a quantum particle can travel along different paths simultaneously, so
we would like to compute
Generalization to a string
T tension of the string
dS Minkowski area element
dS
Curiously, string can propagate consistently
only when the dimension of spacetime isD=26
Why is it so?
We have the string spectrum
Each physical boson on the world sheetcontributes to the Casimir energy an
amounta=-1/24.
When n=1, we obtain a spin vector field with
# of degrees D-2
For A tachyon! This breaks Lorentz
invariance, so only for D=26, Lorentz invariance is maintained.
But there is a tachyon at n=0, bosonic string
theory is unstable.
Unstable mode if E is complex
For a closed string
(There are two sets of D-2 modes, left moving and right moving:
)
For n=2, we have a spin 2 particle, there are
however only ½ D(D-3) such states, it ought to
be massless to respect Lorentz invariance,
again D=26.
Interactions
In case of particles, use Feynman diagram to
describe physical process perturbatively:
+ +
+ …
Associated to each type of vertex
more legs
there is a coupling constant
The only constraint on these couplings isrenormalizability.
Associated with each propagator
=
Or
By analogy, for string interaction
+ +…
The remarkable fact is that for each
topology there is only one diagram.
While for particles, this is not the case, for
example
= +
+ +
+…
Surely, this is the origin of s-t channel duality.
One can trace this back to the fact that there
is unique string interaction vertex:
=
Rejoining or splitting
The contribution of a given diagram is
n=# of vertices = genus of the world sheet.
In case of the closed strings
+
Again, there is a unique diagram for each topology, the vertex is also unique
=
The open string theory must contain closed
Strings
=
The intermediate state is a closed string, unitarity requires closed strings be in
the spectrum.
There is a simple relation between the open
string and the closed string couplings.
Emission vertex=
Now
Emission vertex=
Thus,
2. Gauge interaction and gravitation
= massless open strings
= massless closed strings
Define the string scale
Yang-Mills coupling
=
by dimensional analysis.
Gravitational coupling
So
If there is a compact space
D=4+d =volume of the compact space
We have
Since in 4 dimensions , we have
Phenomenologically, at the unification
scale, so .
We see that in order to raise the string scale,
say , we demand . With the
advent of D-branes, in the T-dual picture this
Implies Large extra dimensions
3. Introducing fermions, supersymmetry
In order to incorporate spin ½ etc into the
string spectrum, one is led to introducing
fermions living on the world sheet.
Again, the particle analogue is
The same as what Dirac did.
( )
Similarly, one introduces on the
world sheet.
This led to the discovery of supersymmetry for
the first time in the western world (2D) (independent of Golfand and Lihktman)
Two sectors
(a) Ramond sector
(b) Neveu-Schwarz sector
The Ramond sector contains spacetimefermions
Zero mode
The Neveu-Schwarz sector contains bosons
Now the on-shell condition
is modified to (open string)
n-integer in R sector
n-half integer in NS sector
D=10: NS: n=1/2, massless gauge bosons
R: n=0, massless fermions
8 bosons + 8 fermions =supermultiplet
in 10D.
Spacetime supersymmetry is a consequence.
In a way, we can say the following
(a) Bosonic strings are strings moving in the
ordinary spacetime , but quantum mechanics disfavors pure bosons, they
are unstable.
(b) Superstrings move in superspace ,
or , no way to avoid SUSY!
4. Five different string theories in 10dimensions.
Consistency conditions allow for only 5 different string theories (it appears that
we have a complete list, thanks to duality)
4.1 open superstring or type I string theory
Characteristics:
(a) There are open strings, whose massless
modes are super Yang-Mills in 10D.
(b) As we said, there must be closed strings
(unitarity). The massless modes are N=1 SUGRA in 10D. (c) One can associate a charge to an end
of an open string.
fundamental representation of G, anti-fundamental rep of G
Combined, they form the adjoint rep of G.
G can be U(N), Sp(N), SO(N).
For U(N), the two ends are different, therefore
one may label the orientation of the string.
For Sp(N) and SO(N), the two ends are identical,
thus the string is un-oriented.
(d) Further, anomaly cancellation G= SO(32)
Type I theory is also chiral.
4.2 Closed superstring, type IIA
For a closed string: and
The left movers are independent of the right
movers.
or superposition of them.
two sets of matrices.
Therefore, two basic choices One choice: chiral anti-chiral
We have type IIA superstring theory, no chirality. Thus, it appears that it has
nothing to do with the real world.
The massless modes = type IIA SUGRA.
4.3 Type IIB superstring theory
If chiral chiral
We have type IIB string theory, it is chiral.
Although type IIB theory is chiral, it has no
gauge group, it appears to be ruled out by
Nature too.
4.4 Two heterotic string theories
L: 10D superstringR: 26D bosonic string
26=10+16
Naively, it leads to gauge group , but the
Gauge symmetry is enhanced:
or
In the heterotic theory, there is only one ,
the theory is chiral.
Remarkably, the low energy sector of theSO(32) heterotic theory is identical to
that of type I theory, is this merely coincidence?
Some lessons we learned before the summer
of 1994:
1. String theory is remarkably rigid, it must have SUSY, it
must live in 10D. There are only 5 different theories. Even
the string coupling constant is dynamical.
2. It has too many consistent vacuum solutions, to pick up
one which describes our world, we have to develop nonperturbative methods.
3. It tells us that some concepts of spacetime are illusion, for
instance T-duality tells us that a circle of radius R is equivalent to a circle of radius 1/R (in string unit).
Sometimes, even spaces of different topologies are equivalent.
4. The theory is finite. The high energy behavior is extremely
soft.
The more the energy, the larger the area S. is small.
5. There are a lot of things unknown to us, we must be
modest (such as, what about the cosmological constant?)
What we could not do before 1994:
1. Any nonpertubative calculation.
2. What happens to black holes, what happens to singularities.
3. No derivation of the standard model.
…
III. Branes in String/M theory
1. Why branes?
In the past, it was often asked that if one can
replace particles by strings, why not other
branes such as membranes?
The answer to this question were always:
(a) We know how to quantize particles and
strings, while we inevitably end up with inconsistency in quantizing other
objects.
(b) Perturbative string theory is unitary, no
need to add to the spectrum other things.
Thus (a) and in particular (b) sounds like a
no-go theorem.
To avoid this no-go theorem, we need to look
up no other than quantum field theory.
(a) In some QFT, there are solitons, these
objects can be quantized indirectly by quantizing fluctuations of original fields
in the soliton background.
(b) A theory may be unitary perturbatively,
but nonperturbatively the S-matrix may not
be unitary (showing up in resummation of a
divergent series).
Such inconsistency arises in particular when
new stable particles exist, their masses are
heavy when g is small.
Some stable particles can be associated with
conservation of charge.
For example, when there is an Abelian gauge
field
Happily, for a oriented closed string there is
also a gauge field
Of course, when the space has a simple topology, there is no conserved charge
string
If there is a circle and the string is wrapped
on it, there is a charge.
This is just conservation of winding number.
In a string theory, there is a variety of other
high rank gauge fields, for instance, the so
called Ramond-Ramond tensor field:
But the perturbative states, strings, are not
coupled to them directly. Are these fields wasted?
There is a plausible argument for the existence of p-brane coupled to C .
One can always find a black-brane solution
with a long-ranged
p+1 horizon
r
When , there is no apparent function
source for . In other words, the
source is the smeared fields carried by the BH
solution.
This avoids the apparent paradox that perturbative fields carry no
charge.
If , , black brane decays, but it
will stop at
A soliton charged under , stable.
The stability is due to
(a) is conserved.
(b) implies naked singularity.
The p-brane will be called D-brane, or
multiple D-branes. Their tension is large when
g small.
They can be viewed as a “collective” excitation of strings, but there is another beautiful interpretation!
2. Emergence of D-branes
D is shorthand for Dirichlet. In a closed string
theory, the ends of a open string are stuck on
a D-brane. Namely, these ends are confined in
the bulk. (The brane is like a defect in a superconductor.)
+ -
We argued that there must be fundamental
branes saturating the BPS bound .
If is continuous, as the classical solution
suggests, we have the trouble for accounting
a continuous spectrum.
Fortunately, some time ago, it was proven
that must be quantized, according to a
generalized Dirac quantization condition.
Denote dual to
rank=8-p rank=p+2
Thus Some unit
Both and are quantized.
We said that the microscopic description of a
fundamental p-brane is D-brane. We now follow the route that Polchinski originally followed to see how this description
emerges in string theory.
2.1 T-duality
To understand the logic behind D-branes, we
need to review T-duality.
There are waves on a circle:
There are also winding states on a circle:
Define a new radius such that
Then
That is, wave modes winding modes.
We cannot distinguish a string theory on a
circle of radius R from another string theory
on a circle of radius . T-duality.
2.2 T-duality for open strings
Starting with an open string theory which
contains closed strings automatically.
How do we map open string wave modes?
An open string can couple to a gauge field
tangent to a circle:
if
The natural interpretation is
θ
Thus, an open string wave mode is mapped to
a winding mode with ends attached to something: D-branes.
Boundary conditions on the ends of the string
are Dirichlet. In the original theory momentum is conserved, thus in the dual theory winding number is conserved, the
ends stick to branes.
In the original theory, winding is not conserved, no such quantum number.
2.3 Brane tension
emission absorption
Open string channel
Closed string channel
The old idea of s-t channel duality:
= one-loop tree-level
From the open string perspective, the interaction between 2 D-branes :
Amplitude= vacuum fluctuations, independent of g
From the closed string perspective
amplitude =
But
Exact formula is
2.4 Effective theory on D-branes
Open string fluctuations longitudinal to D-
branes: gauge fields;
Open string fluctuations traverse to D-branes:
scalar fields;
Fermions = Goldstone modes.
The position of a D-brane = vev of scalars
A geometric interpretation of the Higgs mechanism:
massless
massive
3. Branes as solitonic solutions
Back to the field.
(generalization of )
We use the action
Postulate a solution breaking
Breaking
Further,
The solution is
When r large
so
When r small
There is no pt-like source for . That is, the
all non-linear structure of fields serve as a
smeared source-just like the monopole solution in a broken gauge theory.
The mass, or rather the tension
While
It is interesting to note that there is a formal
horizon:
But there is no entropy
So this “black brane” is more or less a pure
state.
We know that it is the ground state of N coincident D-branes.
4. Implications for string dualities
• In type IIA string theory, there is pt-like
soliton with mass
so
How to understand the theory when ?
There is an additional circle of radius so is a K-K mode of graviton.
• Type IIB theory, there is
D-string
Bound states of D-strings + F-strings:(p,q)-dyonic strings. This is implied by
the SL(2,Z) duality.
• In type I theory, there is also
Another kind of D-string, this is the heterotic
string. The list continues …
Type I SO(32) or
Heterotic SO(32)
heterotic string
32 free fermions
16 bosons
IV. Black holes in string theory
1. Basics
In real world, only a very massive collapsing
body can form a black hole
due to the fact that the basic matter constituents are fermions.
Small black holes could (and perhaps did)
form in early universe.
In an ideal situation, such as a free scalar field,
any mass of black hole can form.
The typical black hole (in 4D)
No signal can escape from the horizon.
• Black hole no hair theorem
Outside a black hole, one can measure only a
few conserved quantities, associated to long
range fields:
Mass, angular momentum, charge
Gravitational field, EM field
• Classical information loss
Black hole
• Bekenstein-Hawking entropy
Due to the no-hair theorem and the second
law of thermodynamics, a black hole must
have entropy.
State 1, state 2, state 3, … state 1 billion
The same black hole
An interesting theorem proven in 60’s and
70’s:
A = area of black hole never decreases.
Thus, S of the black hole must be ~ A
So, Bekenstein reasoned
S=αA
But, what is α?
Bekenstein argued, using an infalling massive
spin particle, that . This differs
from the correct value ¼.
Hawking discovered Hawking radiation and
computed
Use
• Thermodynamics
Zero-th law: there is a temperature.
First law:
Second law:
Third law: T=0 is impossible.
• Quantum information loss
Radiation, mixed state
2. Black holes in string theory
Pre D-brane era
Almost no string theorits believed in the claim
of Hawking, that QM breaks down, and Einstein wins anyway.
Perturbative string theory is important in dealing with such a situation, to quote Susskind:String theory perhaps has to solve itself before
solving the information loss paradox-Scientific American.
There were a few proposals. An incomplete
list:
(a)It appears that some nonlocality must be involved in order for the radiation carries away information. String theoy has some nonlocality built in.
(b)
Strikingly similar to D-branes.
(c) Susskind-Horowitz-Polchinski correspondence principle
For a massive string
oscillation level
So
But for a bh
Horowitz-Polchinski suggested (post-D-brane)
that in order to form a bh, G must be tuned on.
But in 4D:
or
for
The correspondence point: for we
have string and for we have a bh.
Schematically
lng
BH phase String phase
lnN Phase transition line?
3. Black holes in string theory-D-brane age
3.1 Near extremal black D-branes
The pure D-brane solution
There is no entropy on the pure branes.
Exciting the branes
hot gas
Near extremal black brane
Thus
At the horizon
Horizon area =
Specified to p=3 is independent of
Counting the entropy of a free Yang-Mills gas,
one finds The discrepancy is due to the large
effective coupling on the black brane:
p=3 is called non-dilaton black brane, since
In general
For 6>p>3, theories are sufficient complex.
For p=2, not much research exists
For p=1, Hashimoto-Izthaki
For p=0, ML
3.2 Extremal black holes (branes)
Strominger-Vafa
A black hole in 5D
T5: D5-branes
waves
D1-branes T4
Physical picture:
D5-D1 open strings
species
The classical solutions
and other gauge fields, where
The horizon volume fixed at r=0 expands at r=0
To compute entropy, we also need
So
Exact result:
Thus the # of states is
Microscopic origin:
A 1D gas of open strings
In the weak coupling limit:
For a boson or a fermion:
The exact formula (Cardy) is
For a boson c=1, for a fermion c=1/2. For the
system of the D1-D5 strings
This result is valid even in case of the large :
by extrapolating BPS states.
Further develoments:
(a) 4 charged BH in 4D.
(b) Near extremal BH by adding left moving modes.
(c) Hawking radiation.
The idea of Hawking radiation viewed in D-
brane picture is simple:
D-brane calculation reproduces Hawking’s
formula (Das-Mathur)
(d) Grey-body factor
. .
Potential due to the background
Maldacena-Strominger, complete agreement.
Are there magic nonrenormalization theorem?
Maldacea conjecture:
The supergravity (or string theory) is dual to
the CFT on the branes. The fact that the near
horizon geometry is AdS is the initial strong
motivation for this conjecture.
In the D1-D5 case
Need large to have semi-classical Geometry:
Need small :
Another much-studied case is D3-branes, AdS5XS5:
4. Beyond D-branes
4.1 Horowitz-Polchinski’s correspondence
Curvature ~
String statesor brane states BH’s
Entropy matches ~ O(1) coefficient.
No need of D-brane charges.
4.2 Matrix BH … …… …. boost Gas of D0-branes
Qualitatively understood:
Banks et al., Horowitz-Martinec, ML, ML&Martinec
But in order to compute exact coefficient, need to
solve many body problem accurately.
4.3 AdS
Can study near extremal BH only ( c>0 ).But provides an opportunity to study formation and evaporation of BH
accurately. One may also study singularity.
Technically unlikely to be solved in the near
future.
Both 4.2 and 4.3 are under the influence of D-
branes.
5. BH problem is unsolved
(a) Counting entropy for Schwarzschild BH
honestly, accurately.
(b) Dynamic process of formation of BH in D-
brane picture or AdS/CFT , information puzzle
(c) Counting entropy for near-extremal BH
accurately for p<3.
(d) For p=3, understand ¾.
(e) Prove the existence of gas BH phase
transition.
(d) Matrix BH need to be studied further
……