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Bosonic string theory is the original version of string theory, developed in the late 1960s and named after Satyendra Nath Bose. It is so called because it contains only
boson In particle physics, a boson ( ) is a subatomic particle whose spin quantum number has an integer value (0,1,2 ...). Bosons form one of the two fundamental classes of subatomic particle, the other being fermions, which have odd half-integer s ...
s in the spectrum. In the 1980s,
supersymmetry In a supersymmetric theory the equations for force and the equations for matter are identical. In theoretical and mathematical physics, any theory with this property has the principle of supersymmetry (SUSY). Dozens of supersymmetric theories e ...
was discovered in the context of string theory, and a new version of string theory called
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 th ...
(supersymmetric string theory) became the real focus. Nevertheless, bosonic string theory remains a very useful model to understand many general features of
perturbative In quantum mechanics, perturbation theory is a set of approximation schemes directly related to mathematical perturbation for describing a complicated quantum system in terms of a simpler one. The idea is to start with a simple system for wh ...
string theory, and many theoretical difficulties of superstrings can actually already be found in the context of bosonic strings.


Problems

Although bosonic string theory has many attractive features, it falls short as a viable
physical model A model is an informative representation of an object, person or system. The term originally denoted the plans of a building in late 16th-century English, and derived via French and Italian ultimately from Latin ''modulus'', a measure. Models c ...
in two significant areas. First, it predicts only the existence of bosons whereas many physical particles are fermions. Second, it predicts the existence of a mode of the string with imaginary mass, implying that the theory has an instability to a process known as " tachyon condensation". In addition, bosonic string theory in a general spacetime dimension displays inconsistencies due to the conformal anomaly. But, as was first noticed by Claud Lovelace,. in a spacetime of 26 dimensions (25 dimensions of space and one of time), the critical dimension for the theory, the anomaly cancels. This high dimensionality is not necessarily a problem for string theory, because it can be formulated in such a way that along the 22 excess dimensions spacetime is folded up to form a small
torus In geometry, a torus (plural tori, colloquially donut or doughnut) is a surface of revolution generated by revolving a circle in three-dimensional space about an axis that is coplanar with the circle. If the axis of revolution does not ...
or other compact manifold. This would leave only the familiar four dimensions of spacetime visible to low energy experiments. The existence of a critical dimension where the anomaly cancels is a general feature of all string theories.


Types of bosonic strings

There are four possible bosonic string theories, depending on whether
open strings ''Open Strings'' is an album by French jazz fusion artist Jean-Luc Ponty, released in 1971 on vinyl by the MPS label. Track listing All songs written by Jean-Luc Ponty, except where noted. Side one #"Flipping, Pt.1" – 4:40 #"Flipping, Pt.2 ...
are allowed and whether strings have a specified orientation. Recall that a theory of open strings also must include closed strings; open strings can be thought as having their endpoints fixed on a D25-brane that fills all of spacetime. A specific orientation of the string means that only interaction corresponding to an orientable worldsheet are allowed (e.g., two strings can only merge with equal orientation). A sketch of the spectra of the four possible theories is as follows: Note that all four theories have a negative energy tachyon (M^2 = - \frac) and a massless graviton. The rest of this article applies to the closed, oriented theory, corresponding to borderless, orientable worldsheets.


Mathematics


Path integral perturbation theory

Bosonic string theory can be said to be defined by the path integral quantization of the Polyakov action: : I_0 ,X= \frac \int_M d^2 \xi \sqrt g^ \partial_m x^\mu \partial_n x^\nu G_(x) x^\mu(\xi) is the field on the worldsheet describing the embedding of the string in 25+1 spacetime; in the Polyakov formulation, g is not to be understood as the induced metric from the embedding, but as an independent dynamical field. G is the metric on the target spacetime, which is usually taken to be the Minkowski metric in the perturbative theory. Under a Wick rotation, this is brought to a Euclidean metric G_ = \delta_. M is the worldsheet as a topological manifold parametrized by the \xi coordinates. T is the string tension and related to the Regge slope as T = \frac. I_0 has
diffeomorphism In mathematics, a diffeomorphism is an isomorphism of smooth manifolds. It is an invertible function that maps one differentiable manifold to another such that both the function and its inverse are differentiable. Definition Given tw ...
and Weyl invariance. Weyl symmetry is broken upon quantization ( Conformal anomaly) and therefore this action has to be supplemented with a counterterm, along with a hypothetical purely topological term, proportional to the
Euler characteristic In mathematics, and more specifically in algebraic topology and polyhedral combinatorics, the Euler characteristic (or Euler number, or Euler–Poincaré characteristic) is a topological invariant, a number that describes a topological spac ...
: : I = I_0 + \lambda \chi(M) + \mu_0^2 \int_M d^2\xi \sqrt The explicit breaking of Weyl invariance by the counterterm can be cancelled away in the critical dimension 26. Physical quantities are then constructed from the (Euclidean) partition function and N-point function: : Z = \sum_^\infty \int \frac \exp ( - I ,X) : \left\langle V_ (k^\mu_1) \cdots V_(k_p^\mu) \right\rangle = \sum_^\infty \int \frac \exp ( - I ,X) V_ (k_1^\mu) \cdots V_ (k^\mu_p) The discrete sum is a sum over possible topologies, which for euclidean bosonic orientable closed strings are compact orientable Riemannian surfaces and are thus identified by a genus h. A normalization factor \mathcal is introduced to compensate overcounting from symmetries. While the computation of the partition function corresponds to the cosmological constant, the N-point function, including p vertex operators, describes the scattering amplitude of strings. The symmetry group of the action actually reduces drastically the integration space to a finite dimensional manifold. The g path-integral in the partition function is ''a priori'' a sum over possible Riemannian structures; however, quotienting with respect to Weyl transformations allows us to only consider conformal structures, that is, equivalence classes of metrics under the identifications of metrics related by : g'(\xi) = e^ g(\xi) Since the world-sheet is two dimensional, there is a 1-1 correspondence between conformal structures and complex structures. One still has to quotient away diffeomorphisms. This leaves us with an integration over the space of all possible complex structures modulo diffeomorphisms, which is simply the moduli space of the given topological surface, and is in fact a finite-dimensional complex manifold. The fundamental problem of perturbative bosonic strings therefore becomes the parametrization of Moduli space, which is non-trivial for genus h \geq 4.


h = 0

At tree-level, corresponding to genus 0, the cosmological constant vanishes: Z_0 = 0 . The four-point function for the scattering of four tachyons is the Shapiro-Virasoro amplitude: : A_4 \propto (2\pi)^ \delta^(k) \frac Where k is the total momentum and s, t, u are the
Mandelstam variables In theoretical physics, the Mandelstam variables are numerical quantities that encode the energy, momentum, and angles of particles in a scattering process in a Lorentz-invariant fashion. They are used for scattering processes of two particles ...
.


h = 1

Genus 1 is the torus, and corresponds to the one-loop level. The partition function amounts to: : Z_1 = \int_ \frac \frac \left, \eta(\tau) \ ^ \tau is a complex number with positive imaginary part \tau_2; \mathcal_1, holomorphic to the moduli space of the torus, is any fundamental domain for the modular group PSL(2,\mathbb) acting on the upper half-plane, for example \left\ . \eta(\tau) is the
Dedekind eta function In mathematics, the Dedekind eta function, named after Richard Dedekind, is a modular form of weight 1/2 and is a function defined on the upper half-plane of complex numbers, where the imaginary part is positive. It also occurs in bosonic string ...
. The integrand is of course invariant under the modular group: the measure \frac is simply the Poincaré metric which has PSL(2,R) as isometry group; the rest of the integrand is also invariant by virtue of \tau_2 \rightarrow , c \tau + d, ^2 \tau_2 and the fact that \eta(\tau) is a modular form of weight 1/2. This integral diverges. This is due to the presence of the tachyon and is related to the instability of the perturbative vacuum.


See also

* Nambu–Goto action * Polyakov action


Notes


References


External links


How many string theories are there?

PIRSA:C09001 - Introduction to the Bosonic String
{{String theory topics , state=collapsed String theory