In supersymmetry, type IIB supergravity is the unique supergravity in ten dimensions with two supercharges of the same chirality. It was first constructed in 1983 by John Schwarz and independently by Paul Howe and Peter West at the level of its equations of motion.[1][2] While it does not admit a fully covariant action due to the presence of a self-dual field, it can be described by an action if the self-duality condition is imposed by hand on the resulting equations of motion. The other types of supergravity in ten dimensions are type IIA supergravity, which has two supercharges of opposing chirality, and type I supergravity, which has a single supercharge. The theory plays an important role in modern physics since it is the low-energy limit of type IIB string theory.

History

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After supergravity was discovered in 1976, there was a concentrated effort to construct the various possible supergravities that were classified in 1978 by Werner Nahm.[3] He showed that there exist three types of supergravity in ten dimensions, later named type I, type IIA and type IIB.[4] While both type I and type IIA can be realised at the level of the action, type IIB does not admit a covariant action. Instead it was first fully described through its equations of motion, derived in 1983 by John Schwartz,[1] and independently by Paul Howe and Peter West.[2] In 1995 it was realised that one can effectively describe the theory using a pseudo-action where the self-duality condition is imposed as an additional constraint on the equations of motion.[5] The main application of the theory is as the low-energy limit of type IIB strings, and so it plays an important role in string theory, type IIB moduli stabilisation, and the AdS/CFT correspondence.

Theory

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Ten-dimensional supergravity admits both   and   supergravities, which differ by the number of the MajoranaWeyl spinor supercharges that they possess. The type IIB theory has two supercharges of the same chirality, equivalent to a single Weyl supercharge, with it sometimes denoted as the ten-dimensional   supergravity.[nb 1] The field content of this theory is given by the ten dimensional   chiral supermultiplet  .[6] Here   is the metric corresponding to the graviton, while   are 4-form, 2-form, and 0-form gauge fields. Meanwhile,   is the Kalb–Ramond field and   is the dilaton.[7]: 313  There is also a single left-handed Weyl gravitino  , equivalent to two left-handed Majorana–Weyl gravitinos, and a single right-handed Weyl fermion  , also equivalent to two right-handed Majorana–Weyl fermions.[8]: 271 

Algebra

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The superalgebra for ten-dimensional   supersymmetry is given by[9]

 
 

Here   with   are the two Majorana–Weyl supercharges of the same chirality. They therefore satisfy the projection relation   where   is the left-handed chirality projection operator and   is the ten-dimensional chirality matrix.

The   matrices allowed on the right-hand side are fixed by the fact that they must be representations of the   R-symmetry group of the type IIB theory,[10]: 240  which only allows for  ,   and trace-free symmetric matrices  . Since the anticommutator is symmetric under an exchange of the spinor and   indices, the maximally extended superalgebra can only have terms with the same chirality and symmetry property as the anticommutator. The terms are therefore a product of one of the   matrices with  , where   is the charge conjugation operator. In particular, when the spinor matrix is symmetric, it multiplies   or   while when it is antisymmetric it multiplies  . In ten dimensions   is symmetric for   modulo   and antisymmetric for   modulo  .[10]: 47–48  Since the projection operator   is a sum of the identity and a gamma matrix, this means that the symmetric combination works when   modulo   and the antisymmetric one when   modulo  . This yields all the central charges found in the superalgebra up to Poincaré duality.

The central charges are each associated to various BPS states that are found in the theory. The   central charges correspond to the fundametnal string and the D1 brane,   is associated with the D3 brane, while   and   give three 5-form charges.[9] One is the D5-brane, another the NS5-brane, and the last is associated with the KK monopole.

Self-dual field

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For the supergravity multiplet to have an equal number of bosonic and fermionic degrees of freedom, the four-form   has to have 35 degrees of freedom.[8]: 271  This is achieved when the corresponding field strength tensor is self-dual  , eliminating half of the degrees of freedom that would otherwise be found in a 4-form gauge field.

This presents a problem when constructing an action since the kinetic term for the self-dual 5-form field vanishes.[nb 2] The original way around this was to only work at the level of the equations of motion where self-duality is just another equation of motion. While it is possible to formulate a covariant action with the correct degrees of freedom by introducing an auxiliary field and a compensating gauge symmetry,[12] the more common approach is to instead work with a pseudo-action where self-duality is imposed as an additional constraint on the equations of motion.[5] Without this constraint the action cannot be supersymmetric since it does not have an equal number of fermionic and bosonic degrees of freedom. Unlike for example type IIA supergravity, type IIB supergravity cannot be acquired as a dimensional reduction of a theory in higher dimensions.[13]

Pseudo-action

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The bosonic part of the pseudo-action for type IIB supergravity is given by[14]: 114 

 
 

Here   and   are modified field strength tensors for the 2-form and 4-form gauge fields, with the resulting Bianchi identity for the 5-form being given by  .[15] The notation employed for the kinetic terms is  . Self-duality   has to be imposed by hand onto the equations of motion, making this a pseudo-action rather than a regular action.

The first line in the action contains the Einstein–Hilbert action, the dilaton kinetic term, and the Kalb–Ramond field strength tensor  . The first term on the second line has the appropriately modified field strength tensors for the three   gauge fields, while the last term is a Chern–Simons term. The action is written in the string frame which allows one to equate the fields to type IIB string states. In particular, the first line consists of kinetic terms for the NSNS fields, with these terms being identical to those found in type IIA supergravity. The first integral on the second line meanwhile consists of the kinetic term for the RR fields.

Global symmetry

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Type IIB supergravity has a global noncompact   symmetry.[7]: 315–317  This can be made explicit by rewriting the action into the Einstein frame   and defining the axio-dilaton complex scalar field  . Introducing the matrix

 

and combining the two 3-form field strength tensors into a doublet  , the action becomes[16]: 91 

 

This action is manifestly invariant under the transformation   which transforms the 3-forms   and the axio-dilaton as

 

Both the metric and the self-dual field strength tensor are invariant under these transformations. The invariance of the 3-form field strength tensors follows from the fact that  .

Supersymmetry transformations

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The equations of motion acquired from the supergravity action are invariant under the following supersymmetry transformations[17]

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Here   are the field strength tensors associated with the   gauge fields, including all their magnetic duals for  , while  . Additionally,   when   is even and   when it is odd.

Relation to string theory

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Type IIB supergravity is the low-energy limit of type IIB string theory. The fields of the supergravity in the string frame are directly related to the different massless states of the string theory. In particular, the metric, Kalb–Ramond field, and dilaton are NSNS fields, while the three   p-forms are RR fields. Meanwhile, the gravitational coupling constant is related to the Regge slope through  .[14]: 114 

The global   symmetry of the supergravity is not a symmetry of the full type IIB string theory since it would mix the   and   fields. This does not happen in the string theory since one of these is an NSNS field and the other an RR field, with these having different physics, such as the former coupling to strings but the latter not.[16]: 92  The symmetry is instead broken to the discrete subgroup   which is believed to be a symmetry of the full type IIB string theory.

The quantum theory is anomaly free, with the gravitational anomalies cancelling exactly.[16]: 98  In string theory the pseudo-action receives much studied corrections that are classified into two types. The first are quantum corrections in terms of the string coupling and the second are string corrections terms of the Regge slope  . These corrections play an important role in many moduli stabilisation scenarios.

Dimensional reduction of type IIA and type IIB supergravities necessarily results in the same nine-dimensional   theory since only one superalgebra of this type exists in this dimension.[18] This is closely linked to the T-duality between the corresponding string theories.

Notes

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  1. ^ This theory has two left-handed Majorana–Weyl gravitions, with it being equivalent to the   theory that has two right-handed gravitions.
  2. ^ This is because the kinetic term has the form  , which vanishes since   for p-forms with odd  .[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b Schwarz, J.H. (1983). "Covariant field equations of chiral N = 2 D = 10 supergravity". Nuclear Physics B. 226 (2): 269–288. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(83)90192-X.
  2. ^ a b Howe, P.S.; West, P.C. "The complete N =2, d = 10 supergravity". Nuclear Physics B. 238 (1): 181–220. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(84)90472-3.
  3. ^ Nahm, W. (1978). "Supersymmetries and their representations". Nuclear Physics B. 135 (1): 149–166. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(78)90218-3.
  4. ^ Schwarz, J.H. (1982). "Superstring theory". Physics Reports. 89 (3): 223–322. doi:10.1016/0370-1573(82)90087-4.
  5. ^ a b Bergshoeff, E.; Hull, C.M.; Ortin, T. (1995). "Duality in the type II superstring effective action". Nucl. Phys. B. 451: 547–578. arXiv:hep-th/9504081. doi:10.1016/0550-3213(95)00367-2.
  6. ^ Sezgin, E. (2023). "Survey of supergravities". arXiv:2312.06754 [hep-th].
  7. ^ a b Becker, K.; Becker, M.; Schwarz, J.H. (2006). String Theory and M-Theory: A Modern Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521860697.
  8. ^ a b Dall'Agata, G.; Zagermann, M. (2021). Supergravity: From First Principles to Modern Applications. Springer. ISBN 978-3662639788.
  9. ^ a b Townsend, P.K. (1995). "P-Brane Democracy". The World in Eleven Dimensions Supergravity, supermembranes and M-theory. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0750306720.
  10. ^ a b Freedman, D.Z.; Van Proeyen, A. (2012). Supergravity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521194013.
  11. ^ Nakahara, M. (2003). Geometry, Topology and Physics (2 ed.). CRC Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-0750306065.
  12. ^ Ashoke, S. (2016). "Covariant Action for Type IIB Supergravity". JHEP. 07: 017. arXiv:1511.08220. doi:10.1007/JHEP07(2016)017.
  13. ^ Green, M.; Schwarz, J.H.; Witten, E. (1988). "13". Superstring Theory: 25th Anniversary Edition: Volume 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 314. ISBN 978-1107029132.
  14. ^ a b Ibanez, L.E.; Uranga, A.M. (2012). String Theory and Particle Physics: An Introduction to String Phenomenology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521517522.
  15. ^ Hebecker, A. (2021). Naturalness, String Landscape and Multiverse. Springer. p. 147. ISBN 978-3030651503.
  16. ^ a b c Polchinski, J. (1998). String Theory Volume II: Superstring Theory and Beyond. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1551439761.
  17. ^ Bergshoeff, E.; de Roo, M.; Janssen, B.; Ortin, T. (1999). "The Super D9-brane and its truncations". Nucl. Phys. B. 550: 289–302. arXiv:hep-th/9901055. doi:10.1016/S0550-3213(99)00214-X.
  18. ^ Ortin, T. (2015). Gravity and Strings (2 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 694–698. ISBN 978-0521768139.