Heterotic string theory
String theory |
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Perturbative theory |
Non-perturbative results |
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Mathematics |
In string theory, a heterotic string is a closed string (or loop) which is a hybrid ('heterotic') of a superstring and a bosonic string. There are two kinds of heterotic string, the heterotic SO(32) and the heterotic E8 × E8, abbreviated to HO and HE. Heterotic string theory was first developed in 1985 by David Gross, Jeffrey Harvey, Emil Martinec, and Ryan Rohm[1] (the so-called "Princeton String Quartet"[2]), in one of the key papers that fueled the first superstring revolution.
String duality
String duality is a class of symmetries in physics that link different string theories. In the 1990s, it was realized that the strong coupling limit of the HO theory is type I string theory — a theory that also contains open strings; this relation is called S-duality. The HO and HE theories are also related by T-duality.
Because the various superstring theories were shown to be related by dualities, it was proposed that each type of string was a different limit of a single underlying theory called M-theory.
References
- ^ Gross, D. J., Harvey, J. A., Martinec, E., Rohm, R. (1985). "Heterotic string." Physical Review Letters, 54(6), 502–505.
- ^ Dennis Overbye, "String theory, at 20, explains it all (or not)". NY Times, 2004-12-07