Compact hyperbolic extra dimension: a \(M\)-theory solution and its implications for the LHC
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2248209
DOI10.1007/JHEP08(2010)006zbMath1291.81338arXiv1006.1901WikidataQ59253466 ScholiaQ59253466MaRDI QIDQ2248209
Seong Chan Park, Domenico Orlando
Publication date: 30 June 2014
Published in: Journal of High Energy Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1006.1901
String and superstring theories; other extended objects (e.g., branes) in quantum field theory (81T30) Kaluza-Klein and other higher-dimensional theories (83E15) Riemann surfaces; Weierstrass points; gap sequences (14H55)
Related Items (5)
Towards Kaluza-Klein dark matter on nilmanifolds ⋮ Lifshitz solutions in supergravity and string theory ⋮ Exact greybody factors for the brane scalar field of five-dimensional rotating black holes ⋮ A new mechanism for symmetry breaking from nilmanifolds ⋮ Cheeger bounds on spin-two fields
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Hawking radiation from a \((4+n)\)-dimensional rotating black hole on the brane
- The hierarchy problem and new dimensions at a millimeter
- The arithmetic and geometry of some hyperbolic three manifolds
- Out of this world supersymmetry breaking.
- Compactification on negatively curved manifolds
- Quasi-conformal mappings in n-space and the rigidity of hyperbolic space forms
- Accelerating cosmologies from exponential potentials
- Compact Hyperbolic Extra Dimensions: Branes, Kaluza-Klein Modes, and Cosmology
- String theory: exact solutions, marginal deformations and hyperbolic spaces
- M‐theory compactifications on hyperbolic spaces
- On the Diameters of Compact Riemann Surfaces
- Large Mass Hierarchy from a Small Extra Dimension
- An Alternative to Compactification
- A Remark on Mahler's Compactness Theorem
- Hyperbolic spaces in string and M-theory
- Electroweak symmetry breaking from dimensional deconstruction
This page was built for publication: Compact hyperbolic extra dimension: a \(M\)-theory solution and its implications for the LHC