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  Moduli Stabilization in 6D Einstein-Maxwell theory - Fluxes and O3 planes

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I'd like to do the maths for the moduli stabilization of 6D Einstein-Maxwell Gravity S=d6XG6(M46R6[G6]M26|F2|2),

where the 6D metric is specified by ds2=gμν(x)dxμdxν+R2(x)ˆgmn(y)dymdyn,

and ˆgmn is the metric of a compact 2D manifold with unit volume.

The setup of this model can be found in Denef, Douglas, Kachru, starting on page 10.

Now I want to perform the dimensional reduction of the theory and thereby obtain the correct effective potential V(R)=χR4n2R6.

I could manage to derive the first part of the potential by rewriting ds2=R2(x){gμν(x)R2(x)dxμdxν+ˆgmn(y)dymdyn}

which allows me to rescale the 6D action by GMN=R2˜GMN. Then we are left with a product space, i.e. we can write R6[˜G6]=R4[˜g]+R2[ˆg], where ˜gμν=1R2gμν. Further rescaling brings a factor R4 for the term χ, while a factor R2 has been absorbed in order to write M24=M46R2.

However, I'm not sure how to obtain the term n2R6. I'd appreciate any help.

My idea is as follows: d6XG6M26|F2|2=d6XR6˜G6M26|F2|2==d4x˜gd2yˆgR6M26|F2|2=d4xgd2yˆgR2M26|F2|2M26d4xgR2(1R2)2(nR2)2=M26d4xgn2R6

In the last line, we obtain a factor R4 because of γmˆmγnˆnFmnFˆmˆn and the second factor comes from F2nR2, since M2F2=n.

However, I'm puzzled because the factor of M26 remains. If I want to rewrite the action s.t. we have a factor M24 in front, then the term I obtain reads 1M4Rn2R6 (reminder: M24=M46R2).

So, where is my mistake?

Furthermore, it is claimed that O3 planes give rise to an additional term mR4 (after Weyl rescaling), but I've no idea how it arises. I would start with a CS term C4 for the action...

It would be great if anyone could help me with these questions. Thanks in advance!

This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-05-22 21:10 (UTC), posted by SE-user psm
asked Dec 26, 2013 in Theoretical Physics by psm (55 points) [ no revision ]
retagged May 22, 2015
Yes, seems strange. Usually, it seems that there is no M26 term in front of the |F2|2 term, and there is also a cosmological constant Λ (see for instance page 18 and 19, of this presentation, with S2 as the internal space). Here the ansatz is a little bit different - with a ψ field - so your potential could be understood as the limit of V(ψ) when ψ0, with Λ=0. However, we see also clearly the flux term n2.

This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-05-22 21:10 (UTC), posted by SE-user Trimok
Thank you, Trimok! Unfortunately I think I made a little mistake when deriving the potential for F2=0. Now, I come up with S=d4xhM46(R4[h]χR4). The strategy is the same as sketched in the question, except that I need to do another Weyl rescaling in the end. But the factor M46 contains R2. However, Denef, Douglas and Kachru pulled a factor of R2 out of the integral, even though R=R(x) - see eq (3) of the paper in my question.

This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-05-22 21:10 (UTC), posted by SE-user psm
A problem with all this stuff is the mass dimensionality of all the used terms and lagrangians. For instance, V(R)=χR4n2R6 seems curious, if n is dimensionless, because R has the dimension of a length. So maybe one needs some redefinition of F ?

This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-05-22 21:10 (UTC), posted by SE-user Trimok
True, V(R) like that seems very strange. However, I believe this should represent just a schematic dependence. So, prefactors should be included (and that's what Zwiebach does in his introductory book, but unfortunately w/o derivation). A redefinition of F with factors of R might further spoil the result I've derived in my question (which makes sense to me and looks good up to M46). Maybe I should ignore any fundamental masses and include them afterwards?

This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-05-22 21:10 (UTC), posted by SE-user psm
Sounds a good idea, because it is headsick, to check mass dimensionality...

This post imported from StackExchange Physics at 2015-05-22 21:10 (UTC), posted by SE-user Trimok

By the way, the original article on the moduli stabilization of 6d Einstein-Maxwell theory is

S. Randjbar-Daemi, Abdus Salam and J. A. Strathdee, Spontaneous Compactification In Six-Dimensional Einstein-Maxwell Theory, Nucl. Phys. B 214, 491 (1983) (spire)

Maybe that has a more detailed derivation speled out? (I haven't had a chance to check yet.)

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