pith. sign in

Zero-point length from string fluctuations

2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

2 Pith papers citing it
abstract

One of the leading candidates for quantum gravity, viz. string theory, has the following features incorporated in it. (i) The full spacetime is higher dimensional, with (possibly) compact extra-dimensions; (ii) There is a natural minimal length below which the concept of continuum spacetime needs to be modified by some deeper concept. On the other hand, the existence of a minimal length (or zero-point length) in four-dimensional spacetime, with obvious implications as UV regulator, has been often conjectured as a natural aftermath of any correct quantum theory of gravity. We show that one can incorporate the apparently unrelated pieces of information - zero-point length, extra-dimensions, string T-duality - in a consistent framework. This is done in terms of a modified Kaluza-Klein theory that interpolates between (high-energy) string theory and (low-energy) quantum field theory. In this model, the zero-point length in four dimensions is a ``virtual memory'' of the length scale of compact extra-dimensions. Such a scale turns out to be determined by T-duality inherited from the underlying fundamental string theory. From a low energy perspective short distance infinities are cut off by a minimal length which is proportional to the square root of the string slope, i.e. \sqrt{\alpha^\prime}. Thus, we bridge the gap between the string theory domain and the low energy arena of point-particle quantum field theory.

fields

gr-qc 2

years

2025 2

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 2

representative citing papers

Regular black holes with gravitational self-energy as dark matter

gr-qc · 2025-09-10 · unverdicted · novelty 5.0

Incorporating non-local gravitational self-energy from a T-duality-inspired model yields a regular neutral black-hole metric with extremal Planck-mass particle-black-hole solutions that are thermodynamically stable and suggested as dark matter.

citing papers explorer

Showing 2 of 2 citing papers.