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Physics: The mother of all string theories passes a litmus test

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Why Is M-Theory the Leading Candidate for Theory of Everything?

Quanta Magazine said:
It’s not easy being a “theory of everything.” A TOE has the very tough job of fitting gravity into the quantum laws of nature in such a way that, on large scales, gravity looks like curves in the fabric of space-time, as Albert Einstein described in his general theory of relativity. Somehow, space-time curvature emerges as the collective effect of quantized units of gravitational energy — particles known as gravitons. But naive attempts to calculate how gravitons interact result in nonsensical infinities, indicating the need for a deeper understanding of gravity.

String theory (or, more technically, M-theory) is often described as the leading candidate for the theory of everything in our universe. But there’s no empirical evidence for it, or for any alternative ideas about how gravity might unify with the rest of the fundamental forces. Why, then, is string/M-theory given the edge over the others?

The theory famously posits that gravitons, as well as electrons, photons and everything else, are not point-particles but rather imperceptibly tiny ribbons of energy, or “strings,” that vibrate in different ways. Interest in string theory soared in the mid-1980s, when physicists realized that it gave mathematically consistent descriptions of quantized gravity. But the five known versions of string theory were all “perturbative,” meaning they broke down in some regimes. Theorists could calculate what happens when two graviton strings collide at high energies, but not when there’s a confluence of gravitons extreme enough to form a black hole.

Then, in 1995, the physicist Edward Witten discovered the mother of all string theories. He found various indications that the perturbative string theories fit together into a coherent nonperturbative theory, which he dubbed M-theory. M-theory looks like each of the string theories in different physical contexts but does not itself have limits on its regime of validity — a major requirement for the theory of everything. Or so Witten’s calculations suggested. “Witten could make these arguments without writing down the equations of M-theory, which is impressive but left many questions unanswered,” explained David Simmons-Duffin, a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of Technology.

Another research explosion ensued two years later, when the physicist Juan Maldacena discovered the AdS/CFT correspondence: a hologram-like relationship connecting gravity in a space-time region called anti-de Sitter (AdS) space to a quantum description of particles (called a “conformal field theory”) moving around on that region’s boundary. AdS/CFT gives a complete definition of M-theory for the special case of AdS space-time geometries, which are infused with negative energy that makes them bend in a different way than our universe does. For such imaginary worlds, physicists can describe processes at all energies, including, in principle, black hole formation and evaporation. The 16,000 papers that have cited Maldacena’s over the past 20 years mostly aim at carrying out these calculations in order to gain a better understanding of AdS/CFT and quantum gravity.

This basic sequence of events has led most experts to consider M-theory the leading TOE candidate, even as its exact definition in a universe like ours remains unknown. Whether the theory is correct is an altogether separate question. The strings it posits — as well as extra, curled-up spatial dimensions that these strings supposedly wiggle around in — are 10 million billion times smaller than experiments like the Large Hadron Collider can resolve. And some macroscopic signatures of the theory that might have been seen, such as cosmic strings and supersymmetry, have not shown up.

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It's a disappointingly vague article, for that site.

The title suggests a recent litmus-test that was passed, but as best I can understand, it's more that M-theory seems to behave sensibly at quantum scale, but that doesn't appear to be something new?? But perhaps I misunderstood even that much. :tongue
 

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That's what it is -- that M-theory is the best at doing quantum gravity consistently. Other theories have greater difficulties than what it has, it seems.

I'll now try to give a brief introduction to M-theory. It depends on string theory, so I'll give a little bit about that.

The simplest sort of quantum-mechanical string is the "bosonic string". It likes to live in 26 space-time dimensions, and its main claim to fame is that gravity pops out of it in a coherent fashion.

Supersymmetry is a symmetry that relates integer-spin particles (bosons) with half-odd-spin particles (fermions). For every bosonic mode, there is a fermionic one, and vice versa. It has some theoretically very attractive properties, including the possibility of explaining why our Universe contains spin-1/2 particles. Applying SUSY to gravity gives supersymmetric gravity or supergravity (not superstrong gravity). A SUGRA theory has gravity as space-time curvature, a spin-3/2 particle called the gravitino, and often some additional particles.

Bosonic strings can be either open or closed, and there are five self-consistent types of superstrings. They all prefer to be live in 10 space-time dimensions, and they all have some supergravity theory as its low-energy limit. Some of them have additional particles, however.

These five theories are related by "dualities", and with 11-dimensional supergravity, these theories suggest an underlying theory that has been named M-theory. But it has been hard to go much further than that.