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by elashri
819 days ago
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> do they unify electromagnetism and gravity in the sense that electromagnetism also "works by changing the geometry of spacetime" ? Yes, somehow actually. KK theories introduce an extra spatial dimension beyond our usual (3+1) which is postulated to be "compactified". This just means that it's curled up on itself at such a tiny scale that we don't directly perceive it. The way this extra dimension is curled and shaped affects the geometry of the overall 5-D spacetime. How it is connected to EM is that now these geometrical variations in the 5-D spacetime, when viewed from our 4-D perspective, manifest as the EM force and its associated field. So you can say like in GR which have gravity arises as consequence of geometry, it is in KK that EM is consequence of geometry. However, the geometry and details are different. > How does this relate to QFT? Not much in the sense that they can provide useful information to each other. QFT describes forces in terms of interactions mediated by particles (e.g., photons for EM). KK, while primarily geometrical, give hints that perhaps these force-carrying particles can be associated with specific vibrational modes of the extra dimension. Of course KK theory only include EM and gravity. So we know for sure that we need to go beyond KK. This was the actual motivation for people to think about string theory to expand the original KK work. |
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You've just explained "compactified" in terms of being "curled up", but that doesn't really help (for me, at least). What does it mean for a dimension to be "curled up"?