Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The point particle
- 2 The classical bosonic string
- 3 The quantum bosonic string
- 4 The light-cone approach
- 5 Clifford algebras and spinors
- 6 The classical superstring
- 7 The quantum superstring
- 8 Conformal symmetry and two-dimensional field theory
- 9 Conformal symmetry and string theory
- 10 String compactification and the heterotic string
- 11 The physical states and the no-ghost theorem
- 12 Gauge covariant string theory
- 13 Supergravity theories in four, ten and eleven dimensions
- 14 Brane dynamics
- 15 D-branes
- 16 String theory and Lie algebras
- 17 Symmetries of string theory
- 18 String interactions
- Appendix A The Dirac and BRST methods of quantisation
- Appendix B Two-dimensional light-cone and spinor conventions
- Appendix C The relationship between S2 and the Riemann sphere
- Appendix D Some properties of the classical Lie algebras
- Chapter quote acknowledgements
- References
- Index
4 - The light-cone approach
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The point particle
- 2 The classical bosonic string
- 3 The quantum bosonic string
- 4 The light-cone approach
- 5 Clifford algebras and spinors
- 6 The classical superstring
- 7 The quantum superstring
- 8 Conformal symmetry and two-dimensional field theory
- 9 Conformal symmetry and string theory
- 10 String compactification and the heterotic string
- 11 The physical states and the no-ghost theorem
- 12 Gauge covariant string theory
- 13 Supergravity theories in four, ten and eleven dimensions
- 14 Brane dynamics
- 15 D-branes
- 16 String theory and Lie algebras
- 17 Symmetries of string theory
- 18 String interactions
- Appendix A The Dirac and BRST methods of quantisation
- Appendix B Two-dimensional light-cone and spinor conventions
- Appendix C The relationship between S2 and the Riemann sphere
- Appendix D Some properties of the classical Lie algebras
- Chapter quote acknowledgements
- References
- Index
Summary
Taniyama was not very careful as a mathematician, he made a lot of mistakes, but he made mistakes in a good direction, eventually he got the right answers. I tried to imitate him, but I found that it was very difficult to make good mistakes.
Gora Shimura speaking about the Shimura-Taniyama conjectureGiven any constrained system such as the string we can either work with the constraints or we can solve them. The former course of action was pursued for the string under the name of the ‘old covariant quantization’ in chapter 3. The latter approach has the advantage that having solved the classical constraints in terms of independent variables, it is then straightforward to quantise the theory. The disadvantage is that when solving the constraints by expressing some variables in terms of others one is left with independent variables which no longer transform in a simple way under the Lorentz group. The Lorentz transformations of the remaining variables become very non-linear and the Lorentz symmetry is no longer manifest. As a result, one must verify explicitly that Lorentz invariance is not broken in the quantisation procedure. Indeed, one finds that this leads to non-trivial conditions even for the free quantum string. For the interacting string, the verification of Lorentz invariance in the quantum light-cone theory is a very non-trivial calculation.
At first sight, solving the constraints of the string looks like a very non-trivial task. However, we are free to use the reparameterisation invariance to choose a gauge and we will find that there exists a particularly useful gauge which reduces the problem of solving the constraints to an almost trivial task. The light-cone approach to the free string was worked out in [2.4].
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- Chapter
- Information
- Introduction to Strings and Branes , pp. 81 - 99Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012