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Ken Kubos
 
Default Princeton physicists connect string theory with established physics.

http://www.physorg.com/news97339219.html

Princeton physicists connect string theory with established physics.

String theory, simultaneously one of the most promising and controversial
ideas in modern physics, may be more capable of helping probe the inner
workings of subatomic particles than was previously thought, according to a
team of Princeton University scientists.

The theory has been highly praised by some physicists for its potential to
forge the long-sought link between gravity and the forces that dominate
within the atomic nucleus. But the theory -- which posits that all subatomic
particles are actually tiny "strings" that vibrate in different ways -- has
also drawn criticism for being untestable in the laboratory, and perhaps
impossible to connect with real-world phenomena.

However, the Princeton researchers have found new mathematical evidence that
some of string theory's predictions mesh closely with those of a
well-respected body of physics called "gauge theory," which has been
demonstrated to underlie the interactions among quarks and gluons, the
vanishingly small objects that combine to form protons, neutrons and other,
more exotic subatomic particles. The discovery, say the physicists, could
open up a host of uses for string theory in attacking practical physics
problems.

"These problems include describing the interactions among the quarks within
everyday atomic nuclei," said Igor Klebanov, the Thomas D. Jones Professor
of Mathematical Physics at Princeton and an author of a recent paper on the
subject. "We have previously been able to study these interactions in detail
only at the high-energy conditions within particle accelerators, but with
these findings we may be able to describe what's happening inside the atoms
that make up rocks and trees. We cannot do so yet, but it appears that the
math of string theory could be what we need to bridge this gap."

The team's paper appears in the March 30 issue of the scientific journal
Physical Review Letters. Klebanov's co-authors include graduate student
Marcus Benna and postdoctoral fellows Sergio Benvenuti and Antonello
Scardicchio.

For Klebanov, the findings represent a major success in the decades-old
search for connections between strings and gauge theory, the latter of
which -- to a particle physicist -- lays out the established laws that
describe all ordinary matter.

The many facets of gauge theory add up to a well-established and coherent
picture of the behaviors of quarks and gluons, which largely compose most
familiar forms of matter. Decades of observations at particle accelerators
have shown that gauge theory accounts for quark and gluon behavior quite
well, at least at the very high energy levels that exist when two isolated
particles are smashed together at nearly the speed of light.

At these high energies, the interaction force holding the quarks together
grows weak, and scientists can break particles apart to observe their
constituents. Unfortunately, these observations -- and even gauge theory
itself when applied at these high energies -- do not reveal as much as
physicists would like about everyday matter traveling at everyday speeds.

"The sad truth is that when these quarks and gluons start binding together
into protons and neutrons, this interaction force grows very strong, and it
is hard to use gauge theory to understand it," Klebanov said. "Basically, to
understand how we are actually made of all this stuff, we need to understand
quark and gluon behavior when the interaction force gets strong."

In the 1970s, physicists posited that when gauge theory loses its power to
describe particle behavior as quarks bond together, string theory might be
able to step in and handle the job. What string theorists needed was some
indication that both theories were headed in the same direction.

The lucky break came in 1997 and early 1998 when a precise relation between
the two was conjectured in the work of Princeton physicists Alexander
Polyakov, Steven Gubser and Klebanov, as well as the Institute for Advanced
Study's Juan Maldacena and Edward Witten. However, more work to explain this
connection was needed.

"It was as though our understanding was a road that started at the point
where the interaction between quarks was weak," Klebanov said. "We could
follow it for a few miles through greater and greater interaction strengths,
but then it stopped before reaching the great strengths that exist in the
atoms of rocks and trees -- the section of road that string theory
describes."

Between the two road sections lay a seemingly unbridgeable mathematical
gulf, and Klebanov had little more than a hunch that there was any smooth
transition between gauge and string theory.

"In simple terms, what we really wanted was some indication that such a
smooth transition exists, which would hint that the two sections of road
were parts of the same route," Klebanov said. "But we were having trouble
finding any sort of connection at all."

String theory, for all its mathematical beauty, once again seemed too
difficult to test -- until Niklas Beisert, an assistant professor of physics
at Princeton, published a paper in late October of last year containing an
equation that turned out to be a crucial piece of the puzzle.

"Beisert and his collaborators made an inspired guess based on sophisticated
notions of gauge theory behavior," said Curtis Callan, the James S.
McDonnell Distinguished University Professor of Physics at Princeton. "Their
equation allowed Igor and his colleagues to work out the 'transition'
between the two regimes. They demonstrated that it exactly matched string
theory's predictions at the strong interaction limit. That was the hard
part."

Beisert said that his team's work provided a useful abstract proof of the
transition between weak and strong interaction strength, but that numerical
evidence had been lacking.

"The result of Klebanov's group gives beautiful numerical evidence for the
validity of our proposal," said Beisert, who is also junior research group
leader at the Albert Einstein Institute in Potsdam, Germany. "All these
studies now make us sure that string theory and well-established gauge
theory are indeed two sides of the same coin."

Lance Dixon, a physicist at the Stanford Linear Accelerator, said the new
paper by Klebanov's team provided a vital cross-check of the Beisert team's
equation, which rested on a few insightful but unproven assumptions.

"The work by Igor Klebanov and his group really succeeded in removing all
lingering doubts about the equation's validity," said Dixon, whose work
provided other evidence in favor of the Beisert team's proposal. "The search
is on now for a broad web of connections linking the high-energy behavior of
quarks and gluons to that of strings, a web in which the first strand was
laid down by (both teams') work."

Klebanov, while noting many other scientists' contributions, credits Beisert
for "providing the techniques and writing down this fantastic equation," and
said that his own team's findings were possible largely due to the Beisert
team's paper.

"That a particular kind of gauge theory is in some sense 'exactly solvable'
realizes a longstanding dream," Klebanov said. "This is almost like coming
to a gap you expected to find between two sections of road and finding that
someone else has built such a smooth connection between them that you don't
notice it when you drive over it."

This is not to say that string theory is likely to become accepted as an
overall explanation of subatomic physics anytime soon. Klebanov's team has
found a bridge between established physics and a mathematical theory, which
is only one step toward solid experimental proof that the world is actually
constructed of tiny vibrating strings. And even this bridge applies to only
one facet of gauge theory. Bridging this gap for other facets will be
necessary to enable physicists to understand fundamentally the interiors of
the protons and neutrons that make up the earth beneath our feet.

"I think there is hope that other facets of gauge theory are amenable to
similar treatment," Klebanov said. "We don't know for sure if we can use
this discovery to address other problems, but at least we now have new
methods for bridging the gap between the weakly and strongly interacting
regimes of the gauge theory."

Source: Princeton University

--

Ken

"Buddhism elucidates why we are sentient."
"Buddhism follows thought throughout the Universe."
"Karma means that you don't get away with anything."



 
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