| 
Understanding String Theory   
Ibrahim B. Syed, 
Ph. D. President
 Islamic Research Foundation International, Inc.
 7102 W. Shefford Lane
 Louisville, KY 40242-6462, USA
 E-mail: 
IRFI@INAME.COM
 Website:  
http://WWW.IRFI.ORG
 
 Human beings 
throughout history have been passionately searching answers for the origin of 
the universe, from our ancestors to modern day cosmologists. Cosmology is the 
study of the birth and evolution of the universe. The modern theory called the 
Standard Model of Cosmology states that some 15 billion years ago, the universe 
emerged from a big bang (enormously energetic singular event) which spewed forth 
all of space and all of matter. The temperature of the universe at 10^ -43 
seconds after the big band, the so-called Planck time, is estimated to be 10^32 
Kelvin or some 10trillion 10 trillion times hotter than the interior of the Sun. 
As time passed, the universe expanded and cooled. About a hundredth-thousandth 
of a second after the big bang, it was cool enough (10 trillion Kelvin) to 
produce protons and neutrons. As time passed electrically neutral atoms formed. 
A billion years later 100 billion galaxies and 100 billion stars (our sun is a 
star) in each galaxy, and ultimately planets began to emerge. 
 Modern physics rests 
on two foundational pillars: Einstein's general theory of relativity, which 
provides an understanding of the large scale structures in the universe: stars, 
galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and expanse of the universe itself. The other is 
quantum mechanics, which provides understanding of the universe on the smallest 
of scales: molecules, atoms, and the subatomic particles like electrons and 
quarks. The two theories are mutually incompatible. In this new millennium 
superstring theory or simply string theory resolves the tension between general 
relativity and quantum mechanics. According to string theory, the marriage of 
the laws of the large and the small is not only happy but also inevitable. 
String theory has the inherent capability to show that all of the astonishing 
happenings in the universe-from the frenzied dance of subatomic quarks 
(components of protons or neutrons) to the stately dance of orbiting binary 
stars, from the primordial fireball of the big bang to the majestic whirl of 
celestial galaxies-- are reflections of one grand physical principle, one master 
equation. 
 During the past 
hundred years physicists have proven the existence of four fundamental forces in 
nature: Gravitational force, electromagnetic force, the weak force and the 
strong force. Gravity is the most familiar of the forces, being responsible for 
keeping our planet earth around the sun as well as keeping our feet firmly 
planted on earth. Electromagnetic force is the next most familiar of the four. 
It is the driving force for lights, TVs, computers, telephones. The strong 
nuclear and weak nuclear forces are less familiar because they operate in the 
nucleus of the atom. The strong force is responsible for keeping quarks "glued" 
together inside of protons and neutrons and keeping protons and neutrons tightly 
crammed together inside atomic nuclei. The weak force is responsible for the 
radioactive decay of radioactive materials such as uranium, plutonium, and 
tritium. At the microscopic level all the forces have an associated particle or 
the smallest packet of the force. Photons for the electromagnetic force, 
graviton for the gravitational force, weak gauge bosons (W and Z particles) for 
the weak force and gluons (strong glue holding atomic nuclei together) for the 
strong nuclear force. 
 Matter is composed of 
atoms, which in turn are made of nucleons (protons and neutrons in the nucleus) 
and electrons orbiting around the nucleus. Nucleons are made of 3 quarks each. 
Quarks are made of string. According to the standard model of particle physics 
the elementary constituents of the universe are pointlike ingredients with no 
internal structure. However, the standard model cannot be complete or final 
theory because it does not include gravity. But according to string theory, 
atomic particles and subatomic particles are not pointlike, but instead consists 
of a tiny one-dimensional filaments somewhat like infinitely thin rubber bands, 
vibrating oscillating, dancing filament that physicists have named a string. 
Unlike an ordinary piece of string, which is itself composed of molecules and 
atoms, the strings of string theory are alleged to lie deeply within the heart 
of matter and they are so small-on average they are about as long the Planck 
length (10^ -33 cm-about a hundred billion billion (10^20) times smaller than an 
atomic nucleus) and they appear pointlike even when examined with our most 
powerful equipment. String theory offers a far fuller and more satisfying 
explanation than is found in the standard model.   In Einstein's day, the 
strong and the weak forces were not discovered, but he found the two distinct 
forces-gravity and electromagnetism-deeply troubling. For thirty years he was in 
search of a unified field theory that he hoped would that these two forces are 
really manifestations of one grand underlying principle. String theory is 
showing the harmonious union of general relativity and quantum mechanics. Its 
ability to ameliorate  the hostilities 
between the gravitational force and quantum mechanics is a major success. In 
this new millennium, the excitement in the physics community is that string 
theory may provide the answer for the unified theory of the all the four forces 
and all matter. For this reason string theory is sometimes described as possibly 
being the "theory of everything" (T.O.E.). String theory proclaims that the 
observed particle properties (mass, charge, spin) are a reflection of the 
various ways in which a string can vibrate. Just as the strings on a piano or 
violin have resonant frequencies at which they prefer to vibrate-the same holds 
true for the loops of string theory. Each of the preferred patterns of vibration 
of a string in string theory appears as a particle whose mass and force charges 
are determined by the string's oscillatory pattern. The electron is a string 
vibrating one way; the up-quark is a string vibrating another way. Particles 
like photons, weak gauge bosons, and gluons are yet other resonant patterns of 
string vibration. There is even a mode describing the graviton which is the 
particle carrying the force of gravity. Particle properties in string theory are 
the manifestations of one and the same physical feature: the resonant patterns 
of vibration-the music so to speak- of fundamental loops of string. The same 
idea applies to the forces of nature as well. Hence everything, all matter and 
all forces, is unified under the microscopic string oscillations- the "notes" 
that strings can play.  
 EXTRA DIMENSIONS:  It is taken for 
granted that our universe has three spatial (length, width and height) 
dimensions. In formulating the general theory of relativity Einstein showed time 
is another dimension. According to general relativity space and time communicate 
the gravitational force through their curvature. Special theory of relativity is 
Einstein's laws of space and time in the absence of gravity. In 1919 Theodor 
Kaluza, a Polish mathematician suggested that the universe might have more than 
the three spatial dimensions. For example, a garden hose viewed from a long 
distance looks like a one-dimensional object. When magnified (when looked 
closely), a second dimension-one that is in the shape of a circle and is curled 
around the house-becomes visible. The direction along the length of the hose is 
long, extended, and easily visible. The direction circling around the thickness 
of the hose is short, "curled up," and harder to see. Hence spatial dimensions 
are of two types. They can be large, extended, and therefore directly evident, 
or they can be small, curled up, and much more difficult to detect. In the case 
of the garden hose, the "curled-up" dimension encircling the thickness of the 
hose is detected either going closer the hose or using a pair of binoculars from 
a distance. If the garden hose is as thin as a hair or a capillary, then its 
curled-up dimension is more difficult to detect.   Kaluza proposed that 
the spatial fabric of the universe might possess more than three dimensions of 
everyday experience. He showed by having four spatial dimensions, Einstein's 
general relativity and Maxwell's electromagnetic theory can be unified into a 
single theory. In 1926 Oskar Klein, a Swedish mathematician showed that the 
spatial fabric of our universe may have both extended(the three spatial 
dimensions of everyday experience) and curled-up dimensions. The additional 
dimensions in the universe are tightly curled up into a tiny space- a space so 
tiny that it has so far eluded detection by even our most advanced experimental 
equipment.  The equations of 
string theory show that the universe has nine space dimensions and one time 
dimension. Why is it that three space and one time dimensions are large and 
extended while all of the others are tiny and curled up? At present there is no 
answer to this question. 
 1 dimension of time + 
9 dimensions (6 hidden and 3 known) of space = 10 dimensions  Supersymmetry  Symmetry is a property 
of a physical system that does not change when the system is transformed in some 
manner. For example, a sphere is rotationally symmetrical since its appearance 
does not change if it is rotated.  Supersymmetry 
(mathematical transformation) is a symmetry principle that relates the 
properties of particles with a whole number amount(integer) of spin (bosons) to 
those with half a whole(half-integer or odd) number amount of spin (fermions). 
Bosons tend to be the mediators of fundamental forces, while fermions make up 
the "matter" which experiences these forces. Bosons can occupy the same space, 
and have integral spin (0,1, ….), while fermions cannot occupy the same space 
and have half-integral spin ( 1/2, 3/2, ….). Bosons are particles that transmit 
forces such as photons, gravitons, W, Z, particles, mesons and gluons. Many 
bosons can occupy the same state at the same time. Fermions( matter) such as 
electrons, muons, tau, protons, neutrons, quarks, neutrinos, can occupy a given 
state at a given time, and this is why fermions are the particles that make up 
matter. This is the reason why solids cannot pass through one another. This 
explains why we cannot walk through walls--- the inability of fermions(matter) 
to share the same space they way bosons (forces) can.  Supersymmetry is the 
principle that treats all particles of the same mass as different varieties of 
the same superparticle. Supersymmetry means an equal matching between 
bosons(particles that transmit forces) and fermions (particles that make up 
matter). A supersymmetric string theory is called a superstring theory. The 
original string theory only described particles that were bosons, hence Bosonic 
String Theory. It did not describe Fermions. So quarks and electrons, for 
instance, were not included in Bosonic String Theory. By introducing 
Supersymmetry to Bosonic String Theory, a new theory is obtained that describes 
both the forces and the matter which make up the Universe. This is the theory of 
superstrings. Five string theories developed depending on whether the string is 
a closed string (loop) or open, like a hair. String theorists have shown that 
all string theories are different aspects of a string theory that has not 10 but 
11 spatial dimensions. This was called M-theory. The M might stand for Mother of 
all theories or Mystery, Magic, or Matrix.    |