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ISBN 978-3-8439-1107-8

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978-3-8439-1107-8, Reihe Physik

Daniel Junghans
Backreaction of Localised Sources in String Compactifications

131 Seiten, Dissertation Universität Hannover (2013), Hardcover, B5

Zusammenfassung / Abstract

Localised sources such as D-branes or orientifold planes play an important role in many string compactifications that are relevant for phenomenology. The presence of these objects typically induces complicated dynamics in the compact dimensions such that a full solution to the ten-dimensional equations of motion is often out of reach. In order to still be able to make statements about the four-dimensional effective theory arising in the low-energy limit, the equations of motion are usually only solved in an integrated sense, while the backreaction of the localised sources on the internal fields is neglected. This simplification is often referred to as smearing. In this work, we investigate to what extent smearing may affect observables in the effective low-energy theory and whether it may lead to fake solutions that would cease to exist once the backreaction is properly taken into account. We analyse explicit examples for which smeared solutions exist and find that the reliability of the smeared approximation appears to depend on whether or not these solutions saturate a BPS bound. We also address the proposal of placing anti-D3-branes at the tip of a warped throat geometry like the Klebanov-Strassler solution in order to construct meta-stable de Sitter vacua in string theory. We show that, under a few general assumptions, the backreaction of the fully localised anti-branes yields a singularity in fields that do not directly couple to them, and we give an argument suggesting that the singularity is not resolved by brane polarisation. We furthermore demonstrate that, in many string compactifications involving non-trivial background fluxes, the effective lower-dimensional cosmological constant is determined by the on-shell action of the localised sources present in the solution. This often allows to compute the cosmological constant without resorting to potentially unreliable approximations like smearing.