
Why String Theory is Right
Season 5 Episode 1 | 13m 37sVideo has Closed Captions
Some see string theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything.
Some see string theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything – that it will unite quantum mechanics and gravity and so unify all of physics into one glorious theory.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback

Why String Theory is Right
Season 5 Episode 1 | 13m 37sVideo has Closed Captions
Some see string theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything – that it will unite quantum mechanics and gravity and so unify all of physics into one glorious theory.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch PBS Space Time
PBS Space Time is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipstring theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything that'll unify quantum mechanics and gravity and so unify all of physics into one great glorious theory of everything others see string theory as a catastrophic dead end one that has consumed a generation of geniuses with nothing to show for it so why are some of the most brilliant physicist of the past 30 plus years so sure that string theory is right why has string theory been the obsession of a generation of theoretical physicists what exactly is so compelling about tiny vibrating strings in our last string theory episode I talked about what these things really are and covered some history in short the strings of string theory are literal strands and loops that vibrate with standing waves simply by changing the vibrational mode you get different particles analogous to how different vibrational modes on guitar strings give different notes and by the way these strings exist in six compact spacial dimensions on top of the familiar three in this episode I'm gonna tell you why string theory is right at least why so many of those geniuses think it is maybe I can summarize it's pretty or at least it started out that way it's mathematics seem to come together so neatly towards a unified description of all forces and particles and most importantly that unification includes gravity I want to try to give you a glimpse into this mathematical elegance I also want to give you a teaser on why string theory is actually wrong don't worry that topic will get its own whole episode the greatest criticism of string theory is that it's never made a testable prediction the space of possible versions of string theory is so vast that nothing can be calculated with certainty so string theory can neither be verified nor ruled out its unfalsifiable but string theorists might disagree they might say maybe half jokingly the string theory does make one great prediction it predicts the existence of gravity which is stupid of course everyone knows that Isaac Newton discovered gravity when he fell out of an apple tree or something like that there was definitely an apple tree involved but the fact is when you start to work out the math of string theory gravity appears like magic you don't need to try to fit gravity into string theory in fact it will be difficult to remove it and the quantum gravity of string theory is immune to the main difficulty in uniting general relativity with quantum mechanics it doesn't give you tiny black holes when you try to describe gravity on the smaller scales we did talk about this and other problems with developing a quantum theory of gravity in a recent episode but before we get to the nuts and bolts of how string theory predicts gravity it's worth taking a moment to see how string gravity avoids the problem of black holes let's actually start with the regular old point particles of the standard model when a point particle is moving through space and time it traces a lion on a spacetime diagram time versus one dimension of space this is called its world line in quantum theories of gravity the gravitational force is communicated by the graviton particle when the graviton acts on another particle it exerts its effect at an intersection in their world lines over some distance but in very strong gravitational interactions that intersection itself becomes more and more point like the energy density at that point becomes infinite more technically you start to get runaway self interactions infinite feedback effects between the graviton and its own field if you even try to describe very strong gravitational interactions you get nonsense black holes in the math ok let's switch to string theory where particles are not points there loops or open-ended strands the graviton in particular is a loop when strings move on a spacetime diagram they trace out sheets or columns in fact you could think of a string not as a 1d surface but as a 2d sheet called a world sheet now let's look at the interaction of two strings the vertex is no longer point like it can't be point like even the most energetic interactions are smeared out over the string so you avoid the danger of black hole creating infinities okay put a pin in these world sheets we're gonna need them later they illustrate why quantum gravity isn't hopelessly broken in string theory and that's a huge point in favor of string theory but these world sheets will also help us see why string theory predicts gravity in the first place and this is the second point in string theories favor C it turns out that tiny vibrating quantum strings automatically reproduce the theory of general relativity and in the same mechanism seem to promise to reproduce all of quantum theory - this is part of the elegance I spoke of earlier this stuff appears a little too naturally in the math of string theory to be a coincidence or so a string theorist might tell you for some reason vibrating strings are bizarrely well suited to quantization by quantization I mean taking a classical large-scale description of something like a ball flying through the air or a vibrating rubber band and turning it into a quantum description to do this you basically take the classical equations of motion and follow a standard recipe to turn them into wave equations with various quantum weirdness adderdean like the uncertainty relation between certain variables I say basically but this is a tricky process and it only works if your equations of motion are especially friendly Schrodinger's equation is the first and easiest example it quantizes the equations of motion of slow-moving point-like particles a while ago we talked about how Paul Dirac developed a wave equation for the electron that took into account Einstein's special theory of relativity it was a mathematical mess until Dirac added some nonsense terms to the electron wave function the caused a lot of the mess to cancel out those nonsense terms turned out to correspond to antimatter the resulting Dirac equation is incredibly elegant and in the pursuit of that elegance Dirac predicted the existence of antimatter this is a powerful example of how following mathematical prettiness could bring us closer to the truth quantizing the motion of strings also starts out ugly but there are also some math tricks to make it work a bit part of it is making use of symmetries if the physics of a system doesn't care about how you define particular coordinates or quantities we say that that parameter is a symmetry of the system or that the system is invariant to transformations in that parameter finding symmetries can massively reduce the complexity of the math a really important type of symmetry in quantum mechanics is gauge symmetry it's when you can redefine some variable in different ways everywhere in space and still get the same physics I want to remind you of one particularly crazy result of gauge symmetries it's a reminder because we covered it but it's so relevant that it's worth the review so we expect the phase of the quantum wave function to be a gauge symmetry of any quantum theory that means you should be able to shift the location of the peaks and valleys in different ways at different point in space without screwing up the physics and guess what in the Ross Schrodinger equation you can't it breaks to various laws of physics but it turns out that you can add a very special corrective term to the Schrodinger equation that fixes these phase differences preserving local phase in variants that term looks like what you would get if you added the electromagnetic field to the Schrodinger equation so in a way electromagnetism was discovered in its quantum form by studying the symmetries of quantum mechanics it turns out that exploring a very different symmetry of string theory both makes it possible to quantize the theory and gives us a very different field the gravitational field so like I was saying when we try to quantize string theory of course it's a huge mess applying the usual old symmetries got physicists some of the way but to succeed that they needed an extra weird type of symmetry that symmetry is wild symmetry or while invariance this see is a weird one it says that changing the scale of space itself shouldn't affect the physics of strings Hermann while actually came up with this symmetry right after Einstein proposed his general theory of relativity he tried to use it to unify general relativity with electromagnetism fun story while invented the name gauge symmetry to describe this scale invariance inspired by the gauge of railroad tracks which measures the separation of the tracks anyway while symmetry doesn't work turns out that in 40 spacetime it does matter whether you change the scale of space and the separation of its tracks but it turns out that there's a very particular geometric situation that does have while invariance that's on the two-dimensional world sheet of a quantum string remember that mysteriously the 2d sheet traced out in space-time by a vibrating 1d string has this symmetry that lets us redefine the scale on its surface however we like that means we can easily smooth out that surface mathematically and write a nice simple quantum wave equation from the equations of motion but only for 1d strings making a 2d world sheet not for any other dimensional object this is part of what makes true so compelling they're quantized about in a way that other structures aren't but there's a cost to using this symmetry just as local phase invariance required us to add the electromagnetic field to the Schrodinger equation adding while invariance means we need to add a new field that field looks like a 2d gravity on the worldsheet it's a projection of the 3d gravitational field so with our quantized equations of motion in hand you can predict the quantum oscillations of our string these are particles and the first mode looks like the graviton a quantum particle in the aforementioned gravitational field if you use string theory to write down the gravitational field in what we call the low energy limit which just means not in places like the center of a black hole then it looks just like the gravitational field in Einstein's theory okay a caveat you can only get the right particles including the graviton and the photon at a string theory for a very specific number of spatial dimensions 9 to be precise in fact if string theory makes any predictions its the existence of exactly this number of extra dimensions and this is where string theory starts to look less attractive our universe has three spatial dimensions string theorists hypothesize that the extra dimensions are coiled on themselves so they can't be seen but that seems like a hell of an extra thing to add in order to make your theory work there's also no experimental evidence of the existence of these dimensions and that's just the first of many problems of string theory but like I said we're going to need a whole episode for that physicists will lead to string theory by the elegance of the math and the fact that it appeared at least in the beginning to converge on the right answers that convergence is also seen in the union of different string theories by M theory and in the discovery of a DSC of T correspondence again for future episodes but can such an elegant and rich mathematical structure really have nothing to do with reality there's plenty of historical precedent for mathematical beauty leading to truth but there's no fundamental principle that says it has to perhaps we're now overly distracted by the elegance of string theory philosophical points to consider as we continue to foil the mathematical beauty hopefully towards an increasingly true representation of space-time thanks to the great causes plus for supporting PBS Digital Studios the great courses plus is a digital learning service that allows you to learn about a range of topics from educators and professors from around the world you can go to the great courses plus comm slash space-time to get access to a library of different video lectures about science math history literature or even had a cook play chess will become a photographer new subjects lectures and professors are added every month for more information visit the rate courses plus comm slash spacetime last week we talked about one of the most misunderstood concepts in quantum mechanics the idea of virtual particles and their tenuous connection to reality you guys to ask pretty much every question that I avoided yuri nation asks about the photons that mediate the magnetic field or the contact force between two bodies aren't they virtual well they are but they don't exist these fundamental forces and mediated by fluctuations in the quantum fields of the relevant forces those fluctuations can be approximated as the sum of many virtual particles but the particles themselves are just convenient mathematical building blocks to describe a missi disturbance in the field Eddy Mitch asked where the virtual particles are required to explain the Casimir force so the Casimir effect is sometimes explained as a resulting from the exclusion of virtual particles between two very closely separated conducting plates which results in the plates being drawn together so if the Casimir effect really is due to a change in the zero-point energy and are those who say it isn't but if it is then it's still misleading to attribute it to virtual particles more accurately the conducting plates create a horizon in what would otherwise be a perfect infinite vacuum in fact you create two horizons between the plates and one horizon on the outside those horizons perturb the vacuum which can lead to the creation of very real particles as in Hawking radiation but in the Casimir effect the double horizon between the plates restricts what real particles can be produced there whereas there's less restriction on the outside of the plates with their single horizon that leads to a net pressure pushing the plates together david Ratliff asks if a quantum tree falls in a vacuum and nobody's around to measure it does it still have energy well believe it or not you taste serious question as to whether the universe has counterfactual definiteness whether or not we can make a meaningful statement about the state of the universe without conducting an experiment to address this seriously I want you to imagine this Gedanken experiment you have a box containing a vial of poison connected to a radioactive isotope they could either decay or not releasing the poison you put a mime in the box quantum mechanics can't tell us whether


- Science and Nature

A documentary series capturing the resilient work of female land stewards across the United States.












Support for PBS provided by:

