- Type I string theory
In
theoretical physics , type I string theory is one of five consistent supersymmetric string theories in ten dimensions. It is the only one whose strings are unoriented (both orientations of a string are equivalent) and which contains not onlyclosed string s, but alsoopen string s.The classic 1976 work of
Ferdinando Gliozzi ,Joel Scherk andDavid Olive paved the way to a systematic understanding of the rules behind string spectra in cases where onlyclosed string s are present viamodular invariance but, interestingly, did not lead to similar pro progress for models with closed strings, despite the fact that the original discussion was based on the type I string theory.As first proposed by
Augusto Sagnotti in 1987, the type I string theory can be obtained as anorientifold oftype IIB string theory, with 32 half-D9-brane s added in the vacuum to cancel various anomalies.At low energies, type I string theory is described by the N=1
supergravity (type I supergravity) in ten dimensions coupled to the SO(32)supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory . The discovery in1984 by Michael Green andJohn H. Schwarz that anomalies in type I string theory cancel sparked thefirst superstring revolution . However, a key property of these models, shown by A. Sagnotti in 1992, is that in general the Green-Schwarz mechanism takes a more general form, and involves several two forms in the cancellation mechanism.The relation between the type-IIB string theory and the type-I string theory has a large number of surprising consequences, bothin ten and in lower dimensions, that were first displayed by the String Theory group at the University of Rome "Tor Vergata" in the early Nineties. It opened the way to the construction of entire new classes of string spectra with or without supersymmetry.
Joseph Polchinski 's work on D-branes provided a geometrical interpretation for these results in terms of extended objects (D brane ,orientifold ).In the 1990s it was first argued by
Edward Witten that type I string theory with the string coupling constant is equivalent to the SO(32)heterotic string with the coupling . This equivalence is known asS-duality .References
[1] F. Gliozzi, J. Scherk and D.I. Olive, ``Supersymmetry, Supergravity Theories And The Dual Spinor Model," Nucl. Phys. B122 (1977) 253.
[2] E. Witten, ``String theory dynamics in various dimensions," Nucl. Phys. B443 (1995) 85 [arXiv:hep-th/9503124] .
[3] J. Polchinski, S. Chaudhuri and C.V. Johnson, ``Notes on D-Branes," arXiv:hep-th/9602052.
[4] C. Angelantonj and A. Sagnotti, ``Open strings," Phys. Rept. 1 [Erratum-ibid. ) 339] [arXiv:hep-th/0204089] .
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