Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The point particle
- 2 The classical bosonic string
- 3 The quantum bosonic string
- 4 The light-cone approach
- 5 Clifford algebras and spinors
- 6 The classical superstring
- 7 The quantum superstring
- 8 Conformal symmetry and two-dimensional field theory
- 9 Conformal symmetry and string theory
- 10 String compactification and the heterotic string
- 11 The physical states and the no-ghost theorem
- 12 Gauge covariant string theory
- 13 Supergravity theories in four, ten and eleven dimensions
- 14 Brane dynamics
- 15 D-branes
- 16 String theory and Lie algebras
- 17 Symmetries of string theory
- 18 String interactions
- Appendix A The Dirac and BRST methods of quantisation
- Appendix B Two-dimensional light-cone and spinor conventions
- Appendix C The relationship between S2 and the Riemann sphere
- Appendix D Some properties of the classical Lie algebras
- Chapter quote acknowledgements
- References
- Index
17 - Symmetries of string theory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The point particle
- 2 The classical bosonic string
- 3 The quantum bosonic string
- 4 The light-cone approach
- 5 Clifford algebras and spinors
- 6 The classical superstring
- 7 The quantum superstring
- 8 Conformal symmetry and two-dimensional field theory
- 9 Conformal symmetry and string theory
- 10 String compactification and the heterotic string
- 11 The physical states and the no-ghost theorem
- 12 Gauge covariant string theory
- 13 Supergravity theories in four, ten and eleven dimensions
- 14 Brane dynamics
- 15 D-branes
- 16 String theory and Lie algebras
- 17 Symmetries of string theory
- 18 String interactions
- Appendix A The Dirac and BRST methods of quantisation
- Appendix B Two-dimensional light-cone and spinor conventions
- Appendix C The relationship between S2 and the Riemann sphere
- Appendix D Some properties of the classical Lie algebras
- Chapter quote acknowledgements
- References
- Index
Summary
“We wanted the best, but it turned out as always.”
“Here is what can happen when somebody's starting to reason”.
“Wine we need for health, and the health we need to drink vodka”.
Some sayings of Victor ChernomyrdinIn this chapter we begin by deriving the T duality perturbative symmetry of string theory from the world-sheet viewpoint in section 17.1. Although there is no complete formulation of string theory, the maximal supergravity theories in ten dimensions, studied in chapter 13, are the low energy effective actions for the type II strings. They are complete in that they contain all perturbative and all non-perturbative corrections. We will explain how these theories allow us to understand aspects of string theory that go beyond the well-understood perturbative regime. In particular, we will explain how the surprising exceptional group symmetries that the maximal supergravity theories possess are likely to be symmetries of string theory when suitably discretised. These symmetries have many features in common with the old electromagnetic duality symmetry of Maxwell's equations, whose generalisation are symmetries of the N = 4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory in four dimensions. This result is discussed in section 17.2.
We then discuss the connections between the maximal supergravity theories which suggest that there are corresponding connections between the string theories and an elevendimensional theory, usually called M theory. Finally we give an account of the conjectured E11 symmetry of an underlying theory of strings and branes.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Introduction to Strings and Branes , pp. 550 - 611Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012