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su·per·sym·me·try (sū'pər-sĭm'ĭ-trē) ![]() |
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| Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Supersymmetry |
A conjectured enhanced symmetry of the laws of nature that would relate two fundamental observed classes of particles, bosons and fermions.
All particles can be classified as fermions, such as the electron and quarks, or bosons, such as the photon and graviton. A fundamental characteristic distinguishing these two classes is that they carry different quantum-mechanical spin. If the amount of spin of an elementary particle is measured in terms of the fundamental quantum unit of angular momentum—ℏ, equal to Planck's constant divided by 2π—then bosons always have integer amounts of spin (that is, 0, 1, 2 …), while fermions have odd half-integer amounts of spin (that is, 1/2, 3/2, 5/2, …). See also Spin (quantum mechanics).
There is seemingly a fundamental distinction between particles with differing amounts of spin. For example, bosons like to act collectively (Bose-Einstein statistics), producing such distinctive behavior as the laser, while, conversely, fermions obey the Pauli exclusion principle (and the Pauli-Dirac statistics), which disallows two identical fermions to be in the same state, and explains the stability of matter. Moreover, all the symmetries that are observed in the world relate different particles of the same spin. See also
In contrast, supersymmetry would relate bosons and fermions. This would be a remarkable step forward in understanding the physical world. However, if supersymmetry were realized as an exact symmetry, the particles so related should have almost all their characteristics, such as mass and charge, preserved. Explicitly, any fermion of spin 1/2 should have a boson superpartner of spin 0, while any gauge boson of spin 1 should have a fermion superpartner of spin 1/2. This is apparently a disaster for the idea of supersymmetry since it predicts, for instance, that there should exist a spin-0 boson partner of the electron, the selectron, with electric charge and mass equal to that of the electron. Such a particle would be easy to detect and is certainly ruled out by very many experiments.
The crucial caveat to this negative result is the condition that supersymmetry be realized as an exact symmetry. A fundamental concept of modern physics is spontaneously broken symmetry. Physics displays many examples of symmetries that are exact symmetries of the fundamental equations describing a system, but not of their solutions. In particle physics the spontaneous breaking of a symmetry usually results in a difference in the masses of the particles related by the symmetry; the amount of breaking can be quantified by this mass difference. See also Symmetry breaking.
If supersymmetry is broken by a large amount, then all the superpartners have masses much greater than the particles that are currently observed, and there is little hope of seeing evidence for supersymmetry. However, evidence that supersymmetry is broken by only a moderate amount comes from examination of the properties of the fundamental forces at high energy.
Of the four fundamental forces, the three excluding gravity are very similar in their basic formulation; they are all described by gauge theories, generalizations of the quantum theory of electromagnetism, and quantum electrodynamics (QED). The strength of electrical interaction between two electrons can be quantified in terms of a number, the coupling constant α1. However, the quantity α1 is actually not a constant, but depends on the energies at which the interaction strength is measured. In fact, the interaction strengths, α1, α2, and α3, of the three forces (excluding gravity) all depend on energy, μ. The couplings α1,2,3 satisfy differential equations—renormalization group equations—that depend on the types of elementary particles that exist with mass at or below the energy scale μ and that are charged with respect to each of the three interactions. If the fundamental particles include not only the observed particles but also their superpartners, taken to have masses not greater than 1000 GeV heavier than their (observed) partners, then from the renormalization group equations, the couplings αi are predicted to meet (unify) at a huge energy of 2 × 1016 GeV. In contrast, if either supersymmetry is not an underlying symmetry of the world, or it is very badly broken so that the superpartners are very massive, the couplings fail to unify at a single point. See also Fundamental interactions;
Although the unification of couplings is the most significant indication that supersymmetry is a new law of nature, there are a number of other hints in this same direction. By observing the large-scale motions of the galaxies, the average density of large volumes of the universe can be deduced, resulting in a value that is substantially greater than that directly observed in luminous matter such as stars and hot gas. Therefore, a substantial fraction of the mass of the universe must be composed of some form of nonluminous or dark matter. Remarkably, many attractive models of supersymmetry predict that the lightest of all the superpartners is a weakly interacting massive particle with just the right characteristics to be this dark matter. See also
| WordNet: supersymmetry |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a theory that tries to link the four fundamental forces
| Wikipedia: Supersymmetry |
In particle physics, supersymmetry (often abbreviated SUSY) is a symmetry that relates elementary particles of one spin to other particles that differ by half a unit of spin and are known as superpartners. In a theory with unbroken supersymmetry, for every type of boson there exists a corresponding type of fermion with the same mass and internal quantum numbers, and vice-versa.
So far, there is only indirect evidence for the existence of supersymmetry.[1] Since the superpartners of the Standard Model particles have not been observed, supersymmetry, if it exists, must be a broken symmetry, allowing the superparticles to be heavier than the corresponding Standard Model particles.
If supersymmetry exists close to the TeV energy scale, it allows for a solution of the hierarchy problem of the Standard Model, i.e., the fact that the Higgs boson mass is subject to quantum corrections which — barring extremely fine-tuned cancellations among independent contributions — would make it so large as to undermine the internal consistency of the theory. In supersymmetric theories, on the other hand, the contributions to the quantum corrections coming from Standard Model particles are naturally canceled by the contributions of the corresponding superpartners. Other attractive features of TeV-scale supersymmetry are the fact that it allows for the high-energy unification of the weak interactions, the strong interactions and electromagnetism, and the fact that it provides a candidate for Dark Matter and a natural mechanism for electroweak symmetry breaking.
Another advantage of supersymmetry is that supersymmetric quantum field theory can sometimes be solved. Supersymmetry is also a feature of most versions of string theory, though it can exist in nature even if string theory is incorrect.
The Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model is one of the best studied candidates for physics beyond the Standard Model.
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A supersymmetry relating mesons and baryons was first proposed, in the context of hadronic physics, by H Miyazawa in 1966, but his work was ignored at the time.[2][3][4][5] In the early 1970s, J. L. Gervais and B. Sakita (in 1971), Yu. A. Golfand and E.P. Likhtman (also in 1971), D.V. Volkov and V.P. Akulov (in 1972) and J. Wess and B. Zumino (in 1974) independently rediscovered supersymmetry, a radically new type of symmetry of spacetime and fundamental fields, which establishes a relationship between elementary particles of different quantum nature, bosons and fermions, and unifies spacetime and internal symmetries of the microscopic world. Supersymmetry first[clarification needed] arose[when?] in the context of an early version of string theory by Pierre Ramond, John H. Schwarz and Andre Neveu, but the mathematical structure of supersymmetry has subsequently been applied successfully to other areas of physics; firstly by Wess, Zumino, and Abdus Salam and their fellow researchers to particle physics, and later to a variety of fields, ranging from quantum mechanics to statistical physics. It remains a vital part of many proposed theories of physics.
The first realistic supersymmetric version of the Standard Model was proposed in 1981 by Howard Georgi and Savas Dimopoulos and is called the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model or MSSM for short. It was proposed to solve the hierarchy problem and predicts superpartners with masses between 100 GeV and 1 TeV. As of 2009 there is no irrefutable experimental evidence that supersymmetry is a symmetry of nature. In 2009 the Large Hadron Collider at CERN is scheduled to produce the world's highest energy collisions and offers the best chance at discovering superparticles for the foreseeable future.
One reason that physicists explored supersymmetry is because it offers an extension to the more familiar symmetries of quantum field theory. These symmetries are grouped into the Poincaré group and internal symmetries and the Coleman–Mandula theorem showed that under certain assumptions, the symmetries of the S-matrix must be a direct product of the Poincaré group with a compact internal symmetry group or if there is no mass gap, the conformal group with a compact internal symmetry group. In 1971 Golfand and Likhtman were the first to show that the Poincaré algebra can be extended through introduction of four anticommuting spinor generators (in four dimensions), which later became known as supercharges. In 1975 the Haag-Lopuszanski-Sohnius theorem analyzed all possible superalgebras in the general form, including those with an extended number of the supergenerators and central charges. This extended super-Poincaré algebra paved the way for obtaining a very large and important class of supersymmetric field theories.
Traditional symmetries in physics are generated by objects that transform under the tensor representations of the Poincaré group and internal symmetries. Supersymmetries, on the other hand, are generated by objects that transform under the spinor representations. According to the spin-statistics theorem, bosonic fields commute while fermionic fields anticommute. In order to combine the two kinds of fields into a single algebra requires the introduction of a Z2-grading under which the bosons are the even elements and the fermions are the odd elements. Such an algebra is called a Lie superalgebra.
The simplest supersymmetric extension of the Poincaré algebra, expressed in terms of two Weyl spinors, has the following anti-commutation relation:

and all other anti-commutation relations between the Qs and commutation relations between the Qs and Ps vanish. In the above expression
are the generators of translation and σμ are the Pauli matrices.
There are representations of a Lie superalgebra that are analogous to representations of a Lie algebra. Each Lie algebra has an associated Lie group and a Lie superalgebra can sometimes be extended into representations of a Lie supergroup.
Incorporating supersymmetry into the Standard Model requires doubling the number of particles since there is no way that any of the particles in the Standard Model can be superpartners of each other. With the addition of new particles, there are many possible new interactions. The simplest possible supersymmetric model consistent with the Standard Model is the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM) which can include the necessary additional new particles that are able to be superpartners of those in the Standard Model.
One of the main motivations for SUSY comes from the quadratically divergent contributions to the Higgs mass squared. The quantum mechanical interactions of the Higgs boson causes a large renormalization of the Higgs mass and unless there is an accidental cancellation, the natural size of the Higgs mass is the highest scale possible. This problem is known as the hierarchy problem. Supersymmetry reduces the size of the quantum corrections by having automatic cancellations between fermionic and bosonic Higgs interactions. If supersymmetry is restored at the weak scale, then the Higgs mass is related to supersymmetry breaking which can be induced from small non-perturbative effects explaining the vastly different scales in the weak interactions and gravitational interactions.
In many supersymmetric Standard Models there is a heavy stable particle (such as neutralino) which could serve as a WIMPs (weakly interacting massive particles) dark matter candidate. The existence of a supersymmetric dark matter candidate is closely tied to R-parity.
The standard paradigm for incorporating supersymmetry into a realistic theory is to have the underlying dynamics of the theory be supersymmetric, but the ground state of the theory does not respect the symmetry and supersymmetry is broken spontaneously. The supersymmetry break can not be done permanently by the particles of the MSSM as they currently appear. This means that there is a new sector of the theory that is responsible for the breaking. The only constraint on this new sector is that it must break supersymmetry permanently and must give superparticles TeV scale masses. There are many models that can do this and most of their details do not currently matter. In order to parameterize the relevant features of supersymmetry breaking, arbitrary soft SUSY breaking terms are added to the theory which temporarily break SUSY explicitly but could never arise from a complete theory of supersymmetry breaking.
One piece of evidence for supersymmetry existing is gauge coupling unification. The renormalization group evolution of the three gauge coupling constants of the Standard Model is somewhat sensitive to the present particle content of the theory. These coupling constants do not quite meet together at a common energy scale if we run the renormalization group using the Standard Model.[1] With the addition of minimal SUSY joint convergence of the coupling constants is projected at approximately 1016 GeV.[1]
Supersymmetric quantum mechanics adds the SUSY superalgebra to quantum mechanics as opposed to quantum field theory. Supersymmetric quantum mechanics often comes up when studying the dynamics of supersymmetric solitons and due to the simplified nature of having fields only functions of time (rather than space-time), a great deal of progress has been made in this subject and is now studied in its own right.
SUSY quantum mechanics involves pairs of Hamiltonians which share a particular mathematical relationship, which are called partner Hamiltonians. (The potential energy terms which occur in the Hamiltonians are then called partner potentials.) An introductory theorem shows that for every eigenstate of one Hamiltonian, its partner Hamiltonian has a corresponding eigenstate with the same energy. This fact can be exploited to deduce many properties of the eigenstate spectrum. It is analogous to the original description of SUSY, which referred to bosons and fermions. We can imagine a "bosonic Hamiltonian", whose eigenstates are the various bosons of our theory. The SUSY partner of this Hamiltonian would be "fermionic", and its eigenstates would be the theory's fermions. Each boson would have a fermionic partner of equal energy.
SUSY concepts have provided useful extensions to the WKB approximation. In addition, SUSY has been applied to non-quantum statistical mechanics through the Fokker-Planck equation.
SUSY is also sometimes studied mathematically for its intrinsic properties. This is because it describes complex fields satisfying a property known as holomorphy, which allows holomorphic quantities to be exactly computed. This makes supersymmetric models useful toy models of more realistic theories. A prime example of this has been the demonstration of S-duality in four dimensional gauge theories that interchanges particles and monopoles.
Supersymmetry appears in many different contexts in theoretical physics that are closely related. It is possible to have multiple supersymmetries and also have supersymmetric extra dimensions.
It is possible to have more than one kind of supersymmetry transformation. Theories with more than one supersymmetry transformation are known as extended supersymmetric theories. The more supersymmetry a theory has, the more constrained the field content and interactions are. Typically the number of copies of a supersymmetry is a power of 2, i.e. 1, 2, 4, 8. In four dimensions, a spinor has four degrees of freedom and thus the minimal number of supersymmetry generators is four in four dimensions and having eight copies of supersymmetry means that there are 32 supersymmetry generators.
The maximal number of supersymmetry generators possible is 32. Theories with more than 32 supersymmetry generators automatically have massless fields with spin greater than 2. It is not known how to make massless fields with spin greater than two interact, so the maximal number of supersymmetry generators considered is 32. This corresponds to an N = 8 supersymmetry theory. Theories with 32 supersymmetries automatically have a graviton.
In four dimensions there are the following theories
It is possible to have supersymmetry in alternate dimensions. Because the properties of spinors change drastically between different dimensions, each dimension has its characteristic. In d dimensions, the size of spinors is roughly 2d/2 or 2(d − 1)/2. Since the maximum number of supersymmetries is 32, the greatest number of dimensions in which a supersymmetric theory can exist is eleven.
Supersymmetry can be reinterpreted in the language of noncommutative geometry and quantum groups. In particular, it involves a mild form of noncommutativity, namely supercommutativity. See the main article for more details.
Supersymmetry is part of a larger enterprise of theoretical physics to unify everything we know about the physical world into a single fundamental framework of physical laws, known as the quest for a Theory of Everything (TOE). A significant part of this larger enterprise is the quest for a theory of quantum gravity, which would unify the classical theory of general relativity and the Standard Model, which explains the other three basic forces in physics (electromagnetism, the strong interaction, and the weak interaction), and provides a palette of fundamental particles upon which all four forces act. Two of the most active approaches to forming a theory of quantum gravity are string theory and loop quantum gravity (LQG), although in theory, supersymmetry could be a component of other theoretical approaches as well.
For string theory to be consistent, supersymmetry appears to be required at some level (although it may be a strongly broken symmetry). In particle theory, supersymmetry is recognized as a way to stabilize the hierarchy between the unification scale and the electroweak scale (or the Higgs boson mass), and can also provide a natural dark matter candidate. String theory also requires extra spatial dimensions which have to be compactified as in Kaluza-Klein theory.
Loop quantum gravity (LQG), in its current formulation, predicts no additional spatial dimensions, nor anything else about particle physics. These theories can be formulated in three spatial dimensions and one dimension of time, although in some LQG theories dimensionality is an emergent property of the theory, rather than a fundamental assumption of the theory. Also, LQG is a theory of quantum gravity which does not require supersymmetry. Lee Smolin, one of the originators of LQG, has proposed that a loop quantum gravity theory incorporating either supersymmetry or extra dimensions, or both, be called "loop quantum gravity II".
If experimental evidence confirms supersymmetry in the form of supersymmetric particles such as the neutralino that is often believed to be the lightest superpartner, some people believe this would be a major boost to string theory. Since supersymmetry is a required component of string theory, any discovered supersymmetry would be consistent with string theory. If the Large Hadron Collider and other major particle physics experiments fail to detect supersymmetric partners or evidence of extra dimensions, many versions of string theory which had predicted certain low mass superpartners to existing particles may need to be significantly revised. The failure of experiments to discover either supersymmetric partners or extra spatial dimensions, as of 2008[update], has encouraged loop quantum gravity researchers.
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