183 research outputs found
(Anti-)Brane backreaction beyond perturbation theory
We improve on the understanding of the backreaction of anti-D6-branes in a
flux background that is mutually BPS with D6-branes. This setup is analogous to
the study of the backreaction of anti-D3-branes inserted in the KS throat, but
does not require us to smear the anti-branes or do a perturbative analysis
around the BPS background. We solve the full equations of motion near the
anti-D6-branes and show that only two boundary conditions are consistent with
the equations of motion. Upon invoking a topological argument we eliminate the
boundary condition with regular H flux since it cannot lead to a solution that
approaches the right kind of flux away from the anti-D6-brane. This leaves us
with a boundary condition which has singular, but integrable, H flux energy
density.Comment: 12 pages + appendices, 1 figure; v2: minor changes, version published
in JHE
The problematic backreaction of SUSY-breaking branes
In this paper we investigate the localisation of SUSY-breaking branes which,
in the smeared approximation, support specific non-BPS vacua. We show, for a
wide class of boundary conditions, that there is no flux vacuum when the branes
are described by a genuine delta-function. Even more, we find that the smeared
solution is the unique solution with a regular brane profile. Our setup
consists of a non-BPS AdS_7 solution in massive IIA supergravity with smeared
anti-D6-branes and fluxes T-dual to ISD fluxes in IIB supergravity.Comment: 27 pages, Latex2e, 5 figure
Towards a Realistic Type IIA T^6/Z_4 Orientifold Model with Background Fluxes, Part 1: Moduli Stabilization
We apply the methods of DeWolfe et al. [hep-th/0505160] to a T^6/Z_4
orientifold model. This is the first step in an attempt to build a
phenomenologically interesting meta-stable de Sitter model with small
cosmological constant and standard model gauge groups.Comment: 1+30 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX, v2: minor corrections, stability
analysis of b_a moduli added, refs added, version accepted for publication in
JHE
D-Terms from Generalized NS-NS Fluxes in Type II
Orientifolds of type II string theory admit a certain set of generalized
NS-NS fluxes, including not only the three-form field strength H, but also
metric and non-geometric fluxes, which are related to H by T-duality. We
describe in general how these fluxes appear as parameters of an effective N=1
supergravity theory in four dimensions, and in particular how certain
generalized NS-NS fluxes can act as charges for R-R axions, leading to D-term
contributions to the effective scalar potential. We illustrate these phenomena
in type IIB with the example of a certain orientifold of T^6/Z_4.Comment: 31+1 pages, uses utarticle.cls; v2: references adde
Supersymmetric Vacua in Random Supergravity
We determine the spectrum of scalar masses in a supersymmetric vacuum of a
general N=1 supergravity theory, with the Kahler potential and superpotential
taken to be random functions of N complex scalar fields. We derive a random
matrix model for the Hessian matrix and compute the eigenvalue spectrum.
Tachyons consistent with the Breitenlohner-Freedman bound are generically
present, and although these tachyons cannot destabilize the supersymmetric
vacuum, they do influence the likelihood of the existence of an `uplift' to a
metastable vacuum with positive cosmological constant. We show that the
probability that a supersymmetric AdS vacuum has no tachyons is formally
equivalent to the probability of a large fluctuation of the smallest eigenvalue
of a certain real Wishart matrix. For normally-distributed matrix entries and
any N, this probability is given exactly by P = exp(-2N^2|W|^2/m_{susy}^2),
with W denoting the superpotential and m_{susy} the supersymmetric mass scale;
for more general distributions of the entries, our result is accurate when N >>
1. We conclude that for |W| \gtrsim m_{susy}/N, tachyonic instabilities are
ubiquitous in configurations obtained by uplifting supersymmetric vacua.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figure
Persistent anti-brane singularities
Anti-D-branes inserted in warped throat geometries (supported by fluxes that
carry D-brane charges) develop unphysical singularities. It has been argued
that these singularities could be resolved when one goes beyond the linearized
approximation or includes the effects of brane polarization. In this paper we
consider anti-D6 branes, whose singularities have been shown to exist at the
full non-linear level, and demonstrate that there is no D8 brane polarization
that can resolve the singularity. We comment on the potential implications of
this result for the resolution of anti-D3 brane singularities in the
Klebanov-Strassler geometry.Comment: 16 pages; v2: comments added, version to appear in JHE
Toroidal Orientifolds in IIA with General NS-NS Fluxes
Type IIA toroidal orientifolds offer a promising toolkit for model builders,
especially when one includes not only the usual fluxes from NS-NS and R-R field
strengths, but also fluxes that are T-dual to the NS-NS three-form flux. These
new ingredients are known as metric fluxes and non-geometric fluxes, and can
help stabilize moduli or can lead to other new features. In this paper we study
two approaches to these constructions, by effective field theory or by toroidal
fibers twisted over a toroidal base. Each approach leads us to important
observations, in particular the presence of D-terms in the four-dimensional
effective potential in some cases, and a more subtle treatment of the
quantization of the general NS-NS fluxes. Though our methods are general, we
illustrate each approach on the example of an orientifold of T^6/Z_4.Comment: 59 pages, references adde
Stability Constraints on Classical de Sitter Vacua
We present further no-go theorems for classical de Sitter vacua in Type II
string theory, i.e., de Sitter constructions that do not invoke
non-perturbative effects or explicit supersymmetry breaking localized sources.
By analyzing the stability of the 4D potential arising from compactification on
manfiolds with curvature, fluxes, and orientifold planes, we found that
additional ingredients, beyond the minimal ones presented so far, are necessary
to avoid the presence of unstable modes. We enumerate the minimal setups for
(meta)stable de Sitter vacua to arise in this context.Comment: 18 pages; v2: argument improved, references adde
Lectures on Nongeometric Flux Compactifications
These notes present a pedagogical review of nongeometric flux
compactifications. We begin by reviewing well-known geometric flux
compactifications in Type II string theory, and argue that one must include
nongeometric "fluxes" in order to have a superpotential which is invariant
under T-duality. Additionally, we discuss some elementary aspects of the
worldsheet description of nongeometric backgrounds. This review is based on
lectures given at the 2007 RTN Winter School at CERN.Comment: 31 pages, JHEP
Smeared versus localised sources in flux compactifications
We investigate whether vacuum solutions in flux compactifications that are
obtained with smeared sources (orientifolds or D-branes) still survive when the
sources are localised. This seems to rely on whether the solutions are BPS or
not. First we consider two sets of BPS solutions that both relate to the GKP
solution through T-dualities: (p+1)-dimensional solutions from
spacetime-filling Op-planes with a conformally Ricci-flat internal space, and
p-dimensional solutions with Op-planes that wrap a 1-cycle inside an everywhere
negatively curved twisted torus. The relation between the solution with smeared
orientifolds and the localised version is worked out in detail. We then
demonstrate that a class of non-BPS AdS_4 solutions that exist for IASD fluxes
and with smeared D3-branes (or analogously for ISD fluxes with anti-D3-branes)
does not survive the localisation of the (anti) D3-branes. This casts doubts on
the stringy consistency of non-BPS solutions that are obtained in the limit of
smeared sources.Comment: 23 pages; v2: minor corrections, added references, version published
in JHE
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