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String Theory - Essay

SPH4U0-C ISU Project


By Michael Mohamed

1. Introduction: A New Kind of Physical Theory


Throughout the history of science various paradigm shifts have taken place
which have radically altered both the scientific tools with which mankind has to
observe and predict the world it lives in. The theory of gravity was changed radically
from the former Newtonian model in the early 1900s by the work of Albert Einstein
in his theory of general relativity. At this time there were huge breakthroughs in the
field of quantum mechanics by scientists such as Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg,
Erwin Schrödinger and Richard Feynman among countless others. What was once
considered the standard model was found inadequate over time and scientists
struggled to rethink their current understanding of the universe in the search for a
theory that might unite all physical phenomena together. In modern times, this goal
has still gone unmet. However, theoretical scientific research has lead to the
development of a new theory that could overtake the current standard model; this
essay will attempt to describe this new candidate referred to as String Theory. The
basic concepts of String Theory will be described first of all through the current
inadequacy of modern physical theories, following with the concept of strings,
multiple dimensions and supersymmetry, and concluding with the description of M-
theory and its critical applications in physics problems, some of which still remain
unsolved today.

2. The Quantum Relativistic Mess


The current standard model of physics has a fundamental flaw: it is actually two
separate theories, the theory of General Relativity and the theory of Quantum
Mechanics. Both theories provide accurate and sensible predictions when applied to
their respective extremities; General Relativity works best when predicting the
phenomena associated with gargantuan celestial bodies, whereas Quantum
Mechanics works best when predicting the phenomena associated with extremely
small bodies such as protons, electrons, quarks and photons. While both theories
are accurate when used correctly, any attempt to use both theories simultaneous in
attempting to understand certain phenomena cause the theories to break down.
This might result in physically impossible measurements such as zeros that should
not occur as well as infinities that should not appear.

The theory of General Relativity utilizes the concept of a smooth and curved
three dimensional surface on which all bodies of mass rest; gravity in then
understood to come as a result of large masses bending space-time and causing
smaller masses to fall toward or around them. One of the most important features
of the relativity is the perfect smoothness of which the space-time continuum is
described as having which, as later shown, becomes the undoing of the theory itself.
The theory of Quantum Mechanics states that for small particles such as electrons
and photons, no deterministic predications can be made about any property of the
particles action; the best approximation then is to utilize various probabilities which
can be predicted given information about various states of the particles. This is due
to the nature of such small particles which are turbulent and extremely varied in
their action; as one attempts to zoom closer in to observe the actions of small
particles, the more distorted and turbulent their movement begins to seem. Using

the constants G, c, and a constant was found for the smallest observable length
in which phenomena could be observed until the quantum fluctuations became
completely unpredictable; the Planck Length.

A problem then arises in attempting to unify the two theories: because the
space-time continuum is predicted to be infinitely smooth, it should be theoretically
possible to continuous zoom into it while observing the continuum becoming
smoother; however due to Quantum Mechanics, zooming in closer should eventually
cause the distortion of quantum fluctuations to make itself more and more apparent
over time. These disturbances to the space-time continuum become most apparent
at Planck length, and render it impossible to probe further without causing one
theory to have to ignore the other. This doesn’t make sense in certain contexts such
as a black hole and during the big bang where extremely heavy and small particles
are involved, demanding the use of both theories. This fundamental problem may
be solved within the framework of String Theory where both Quantum Mechanics
and General Relativity may be united.

3. Strings, Supersymmetry and Multiple Dimensions

String theory diverges entirely from former ideas in physics in that instead of
working with point-like particles in four perceivable dimensions, it works with
versatile strings comprised of energy in several unperceivable dimensions. Strings
can comprise all of the particles, both force and mass based, in the known universe
while still producing evidence of newer particles. The particles become similar to
notes in a musical instrument, distinct due to their frequency and energy; strings
vibrating at varying frequencies and amplitudes produce all of the building blocks of
particles and matter that we understand today while introducing many of its own.
Strings can be closed or open and are typically as long as Planck length.

String theory also introduces the concept of supersymmetry. Supersymmetry is


the concept that every force particle has a matter superpartner that has ½ of the
spin of the original particle; this can help to unify particles together and to show
that quantum physics can be modelled without the augmentation from numerical
adjustments. Supersymmetry has also lead to the emergence of gravitons, massless
particles of spin 2 which carry the gravitational force. This is useful as it can help to
unify the four fundamental forces together; while the 3 quantum mechanical forces
could be unified under electroweak theory, gravity had been excluded. At
increasingly shorter distances, the strength of the forces begin to converge into a
single value; previous theoretical and experimental work showed that the forces
nearly equal each other in strength at some distance, however the inclusion of
supersymmetry into the model allows quantum fluctuations to be cancelled and the
forces to eventually become equal. One detriment of supersymmetry is the doubling
of all the particles that should be predicted due to the lack of any superpartner’s
being discovered.

The concept of duality in string theory is essentially that a two different models
applied to the same problem can create the same result and that two phenomena
with different observations can both be true at the same time; this has been used to
prove that Planck Length being the minimum observable distance. Because strings
are comprised of energy, the more energy they have the longer they can be, and
via E = mc2 they will also be heavier. The energy of a string can be related to its
winding number, the amount of times it can wrap around an object; energy is
proportional to radius times the winding number. Similarly, energy is proportional to
the vibrational number, a number describing the uniform motion of the string,
multiplied by the inverse of the radius. The total energy of the string is the sum of
these products. A pattern appears in string theory such that even if the radius is
inverted, the total energy remains the same. Because the two views of the radius
are equally valid, two different distances can always be observed: the two distances
are caused by either heavy-string modesor light-string modes (as mass relates to
energy). This provides two views of the universe, one where it is much smaller than
Planck length itself, and another where it is the size we observe; the distance
observed always correlates to light-string modes. When Planck Length distances are
to be probed (such as in observation of a black hole), the breakdown of quantum
mechanics and general relativity instead becomes a shift whereby closer zooming
(smaller distances) into a space becomes expanded (larger distances) due to the
duality that arises from the energy equality of heavy and light-string modes.

String theory incorporates a view of ten dimensions, the observable 3 spatial


dimensions, the single time dimension, and six more spatial dimensions. These
dimensions take the form of a Calabi-Yau manifold, a curled up six dimensional
shape. Similarly to how a piece of paper may not appear to have width when
observed from far away, the six dimensional Calabi-Yau manifolds areessentially
unnoticeable. A string has only one dimension, as the dimensions of the universe
increase so do the dimensions which the string can vibrate through. One problem
of quantum mechanics is the negative probabilities that arise in certain calculations.
Using calculations incorporating multiple dimensions, these negative probabilities
tend to vanish, vanishing completely with 9 spatial dimensions. The dimensions of
the universe tightly constrain the possible vibrations of strings; therefore the
amount of dimensions can be related to the various properties of the particles that
we can observe. Why there are 9 spatial dimensions cannot be fully explained
outside of mathematical expression. However, the various properties arising from
string theory tend to be consistent with the observable universe and offer various
tools that may unify general relativity and quantum mechanics.

4. M-Theory: The Theory of Everything?

In the history of string theory research, there were at one point five slightly
different theories, however all of these theories were eventually united under a new
theory called M-theory. This theory extends the previous idea of one-dimensional
strings into multidimensional membranes, or branes; an example of this might be a
two-brane, which is essentially a string with an added dimension, forming a shape
similar to an elastic band or a ribbon. M-theory lead to the discovery that the
multidimensional calculations previously performed are inaccurate; to fully
eliminate all negative probabilities there must be ten spatial dimensions, forming
eleven in total. Similarly, the amount of brane types expands to ten, named one-
branes (strings), two-branes, three-branes etc.

Branes are predicted to wrap around tears in space-time known as flop


transitions which may occur, forming something similar to a very small black hole
within a Calabi-Yau manifold in the process. This tiny sub-Planck length black hole
eventually disintegrates into a massless photon, providing a solid link between
black holes and quantum mechanics. Theoretically, a black hole can be constructed
using only carefully manipulated branes; a theoretical black hole of this kind could
have all its constituents measured as scientists would already know what comprises
it. Using this black hole, the previously unexplainable relation between a black
hole’s entropy (amount of disorder) and its area could be related to a theoretical
black hole and explained entirely in terms of branes.

Because of M-theory’s many triumphs in terms of describing black holes while


remaining consistent with other string theories, scientists believe that it may
eventually become a “theory of everything” that can explain all the various
components of the universe accurately, including the big bang itself.

5. Conclusion: The Future of Physics

So far it has been demonstrated that string theory is not only capable of
describing the universe in the common ways we already understand it, but is also in
many ways capable of explaining some of the problems that have plagued
physicists for decades. This has lead to excitement in the field of physics with
researchers working on string theory itself, but also on the Large Hadron Collider
which may provide string theory with some experimental backing. String theory
itself has been almost entirely theoretical using only approximated equations which
cannot provide definite predictions, only relations. Some problems that still need to
be addressed by string/M-theory: Can information re-emerge from a black hole’s
evaporation? What occurred during the Big Bang earlier than we can predict? Why is
the cosmic background radiation so uniform throughout the universe? Why do only
three of the spatial dimensions appear so large? Are there other universes with
entirely different physics behind them that can still be modelled with string theory?
Overall, the future of physics has much discovery ahead of it; if string theory is
further developed into the next standard model of physics, it will be only one more
paradigm shift bringing mankind closer to a complete understanding of the
universe.

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