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String Theory Doug Howe Nimmi Bhatt PHYS43 Modern Physics, SRJC Section 5756 Younes Ataiiyan Spring 2011 Purpose/Goal String Theory is a developing theory in particle physics that attempts to reconcile quantum mechanics with general relativity. A contender for the Theory of Everything (TOE) Fundamental Forces There are four fundamental forces Each has a force-carrying Gauge Boson: Strong force: gluon Weak force: W and Z boson Electromagnetic force: photon Gravitational force: graviton(?) The Standard Model The Standard Model of particle physics incorporates the electromagnetic, strong, and weak nuclear forces Uses quantum mechanical model; inconsistent with continuous gravitational fields of relativity Regarded as Theory of (Almost) Everything Does not include gravitation; String theory attempts to fix this and is consistent with theories of quantum gravity at high energies History String Theory: Early Concepts Some ideas originate from early 20th century German Mathematician Theodor Kaluza notes general relativity in 5 dimensinos describes both gravity and electromagnatism in 4 (1919) Swedish physicist Oskar Klein suggests extra dimensions can exist if understood as being “wrapped” into a small circle (1926) History String Theory Earliest string model: The Bosonic String (1960s) Describes all forces, including a quantum gravity at low energies Theory is unstable and only describes force-carrying bosons, not matter (fermions) Supersymmetry (SUSY) Invented in Standard Model and String Theory A mathematical relation predicting every particle of ½-n spin (fermions) has a corresponding superpartner of 1-n spin (bosons) with the same mass and quantum numbers Allowed the development of many Superstring Theories which include fermions (1970s) Strings and Branes Quarks and electrons are not 0dimensional point particles Instead 1-D lines or “strings”, oscillating through 10+ dimensions Also includes interrelated objects called membranes “branes” Ex: D-branes are “endpoints” for strings String Properties On the order of 10E-35m, a Planck length Tension, kinetic energy, and uncertainty control oscillations Quantum mechanics of strings cause discrete vibrational modes, causing flavor, charge, mass and spin characteristics Splitting and recombination of strings corresponds to particle emission and absorption Open/Closed Strings Strings can be open or closed (a loop) Ex: one closed string mode is the graviton, one open string mode is the photon All string theories include both types, as the ends of open strings can meet to form a closed string World Sheets Classical point particles produce world lines (left) of position over time Strings produce world sheets (right) String modes (such as photon/graviton) are surface waves on these world sheets String Theory and Gravity D-branes are of variable dimension (point, line, plane, volume) and live on the ends of strings D-branes absorb and emit closed strings of the mode which describe gravitons Different String Theories Many String and Superstring theories with 10-26 spacetime dimensions Now thought to each be special case of a more fundamental theory (M-theory) Each type linked by mathematical transformations called dualities Extra Dimensions Many phenomena are better explained mathematically in more than the usual four spacetime dimensions The number of spacetime dimension is not fixed in string theory It is best thought of as different under different circumstances Where Are The Extra Dimensions Explained by Compactification: extra dimensions are “curled up” and too small to be experienced in the macroscopic world Can be thought of with a garden hose. From a distance its 1-D, but on a small scale (to an ant) its 2D, the second being the small circular circumference Many other theories including “Brane-World Scenario” in which we are “stuck” in a four dimensional subspace of the full universe Compactification A 3D projection of a Calabi-Yau manifold; sometimes used to mathematically describe compactification M-Theory All Superstring theories appear to be correct in certain circumstances M-theory was developed to unify them Proposes that strings are really 1D “slices” of 2D membranes vibrating in 11 rather than 10 spacetime dimensions Problems with String Theory 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. High energies needed to test quantum gravity. Large number of solutions. Lack of uniqueness of predictions as compared with Quantum mechanics and general relativity, amongst others. Lack of background independence. Lack of a large number of predictions that are falsifiable, in general. Is String Theory Science? To be considered part of science a theory must make testable experimental predictions Criticized by prominent physicists including Feynman and Glashow Mathematical approach rather than experiment based Sources/Works Cited http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_theory Serway, Raymond A., and John W. Jewett, Jr. Physics for Scientists and Engineers with Modern Physics. 7th ed. Vol. 2. Thornton, Stephen T., and Andrew Rex. Modern Physics for Scientists and Engineers. 3rd ed. Gribbon, John. Schrödinger's Kittens and the Search for Reality. 1996. Print.