[Excerpt from an Introduction
of The Little Book of String Theory
by Steven G. Gubser, a theoretical physicists
and professor at Princeton University.]
String theory is a mystery.
It's supposed to be the theory of everything.
But it hasn't been verified experimentally.
And it's so esoteric.
It's all about extra dimensions,
quantum fluctuations, and black holes.
How can that be the world?
Why can't everything be simpler?
String theory is a mystery.
It's practitioners (of which I am one)
admit they don't understand the theory.
But calculation after calculation yields
unexpectedly beautiful connected results.
One gets a sense of inevitability
from studying string theory.
How can this not be the world?
How can such deep truths
fail to connect to reality?
String theory is a mystery.
It draws many talented graduate students
away from other fascinating topics,
like superconductivity, that already
have industrial applications.
It attracts media attention
like few other fields in science.
And it has vociferous detractors
who deplore the spread of its influence
and dismiss its achievements
as unrelated to empirical science.
Briefly, the claim of string theory
is that the fundamental objects
that make up all matter
are not particles, but strings.
Strings are like little rubber bands,
but very thin and very strong.
An electron is supposed
to be actually a string,
vibrating and rotating
on a length scale too small
for us to probe even with the most
advanced particle accelerators to date.
In some versions of string theory,
an electron is a closed loop of string.
In others, it is a segment of string,
with two endpoints...
__________________________________
'This book offers a very nice short introduction
to some of the basic ideas and implications
of string theory. Gubser knows his subject.'
John H. Schwarz
California Institute of Technology
'Steve Gubser has written
an engaging and thought-provoking account
of whar was achieved in physics in the last century
and how physicists are seeking to go farther
in the ambitious framework known as string theory.
This is one of the most thoughtful books
on this much-discussed topic, and readers
will find much to ponder.'
Edward Witten
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
'This is an engaging
and concise introduction
to the main ideas in string theory.
Gubser gives us a quick tour
of the basis of laws in physics
as we understand them today,
and then demonstrate
how string theory
seeks to go beyond them.
He serves as an artful and attentive guide,
as the reader explores the mysteries
of quantum mechanics,
black holes, strings,
branes, supersymmetry,
and extra dimensions
in the pages of this book.'
Juan Maldacena
Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
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