Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of inserts
- Preface
- 1 Overview and overture
- 2 Relativistic strings
- 3 A closer look at the world-sheet
- 4 Strings on circles and T-duality
- 5 Background fields and world-volume actions
- 6 D-brane tension and boundary states
- 7 Supersymmetric strings
- 8 Supersymmetric strings and T-duality
- 9 World-volume curvature couplings
- 10 The geometry of D-branes
- 11 Multiple D-branes and bound states
- 12 Strong coupling and string duality
- 13 D-branes and geometry I
- 14 K3 orientifolds and compactification
- 15 D-branes and geometry II
- 16 Towards M- and F-theory
- 17 D-branes and black holes
- 18 D-branes, gravity and gauge theory
- 19 The holographic renormalisation group
- 20 Taking stock
- References
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of inserts
- Preface
- 1 Overview and overture
- 2 Relativistic strings
- 3 A closer look at the world-sheet
- 4 Strings on circles and T-duality
- 5 Background fields and world-volume actions
- 6 D-brane tension and boundary states
- 7 Supersymmetric strings
- 8 Supersymmetric strings and T-duality
- 9 World-volume curvature couplings
- 10 The geometry of D-branes
- 11 Multiple D-branes and bound states
- 12 Strong coupling and string duality
- 13 D-branes and geometry I
- 14 K3 orientifolds and compactification
- 15 D-branes and geometry II
- 16 Towards M- and F-theory
- 17 D-branes and black holes
- 18 D-branes, gravity and gauge theory
- 19 The holographic renormalisation group
- 20 Taking stock
- References
- Index
Summary
In view of the exciting developments in our understanding of those particular aspects of fundamental physics that string theory seems to capture, it seems appropriate to collect together some of the key tools and ideas which helped move things forward. The developments included a true revolution, since the physical perspective changed so radically that it undermined the long-standing status of strings as the basic fundamental objects, and instead the idea has arisen that a string theory description is simply a special (albeit rather novel and beautiful) corner of a larger theory called ‘M-theory’. This book is not an attempt at a history of the revolution, as we are (arguably) still in the midst of it, especially since we are in the awkward position of not knowing even one satisfactory intrinsic definition of M-theory, and have implicit knowledge of it only through interconnections of its various limits.
All revolutions are supposed to have a collection of characters who played a crucial role in it, ‘heroes’ if you will. Hence, one would be expected to proceed to list here the names of various individuals. While I was lucky to be in a position to observe a lot of the activity at first hand and collect many wonderful anecdotes about how some things came to be, I will decline to start listing names at this juncture.
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- D-Branes , pp. xx - xxivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002