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String Theory, Quantum Mechanics and Relativity Dr. David Berman Lecturer Department of Physics Queen Mary College University of London.

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Presentation on theme: "String Theory, Quantum Mechanics and Relativity Dr. David Berman Lecturer Department of Physics Queen Mary College University of London."— Presentation transcript:

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2 String Theory, Quantum Mechanics and Relativity Dr. David Berman Lecturer Department of Physics Queen Mary College University of London

3 1.Theoretical Physics the search for unity 2.Relativity Einstein’s great theory of gravitation 3.Quantum Mechanics the failure of the ‘classical’ String Theory 4.Unification needs String Theory 5.More about strings the exciting way strings changes our view of the universe

4 History Newton (1687): Unified Gravity The same force that pulls you is also pulling the moon and all the planets Unity: A single explanation for many different things

5 Picasso: “A painter should work with as few elements as possible.” So should physicists!

6 Faraday & Maxwell (1873): Unified Electricity, Magnetism and motion Dynamo; Motor; Light Bulb… Weinberg & Salam (1979): Unified Electromagnetism and Nuclear Force

7 All the forces in nature appeared as different aspects/faces of a single force

8 This is the same for matter (the stuff we are made from) The building blocks were found to be smaller and smaller

9 1m man 10 -9 m 0.000000001m molecule 10 -10 m 0.0000000001m atom 10 -14 m nucleus 10 -18 m quark When do we stop? How many different ‘elementary’ particles are there?

10 The basic building blocks known today: 18 Quarks – make up protons and neutrons 6 Leptons – things like electrons 3 Types of Force – Quite good, but we can do better! Gravity ‘Electroweak nuclear’ Strong Nuclear

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14 Michael Green John Schwarz

15 Unity: One Single Building Block STRING THEORY

16 String: The different ways a string can vibrate look like different particles to us. Just like a violin string produces many different notes.

17 How long is a piece of string? ~10 -34 m Far away, the string looks like a point…

18 Einstein playing the violin

19 General Relativity Space & Time continued = spacetime Spacetime can bend Gravity

20 Quantum Mechanics Things on ‘small’ scales fluctuate randomly Size matters in physics! The smaller scales you go the more random and non-intuitive things get.

21 Can we unify gravity & quantum mechanics? Spacetime itself must now fluctuate at small scales Big problem: The smaller you go, the more it fluctuates

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23 String Theory provides a shortest distance i.e. String theory is pointless 10 -34 m

24 For example: Examine a landscape by rolling balls over the surface. The detail/resolution will depend on the size of the ball. To get perfect resolution, you need a perfectly small ball.

25 Other Consequences We live in 10 dimensions 1 dimension2 dimensions 3 dimensions

26 Kaluza & Klein

27 Kaluza & Klein: The other dimensions are curled up and too small to see.

28 Why 10 dimensions? In 10 (and only 10) dimensions is the theory consistent. The remarkable price for unity!

29 Questions How does geometry change when there are no points? What are the effects on the physics in the world we see from the hidden dimensions? Why stop at strings? What about membranes as fundamental building blocks?

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