Bogomol'nyi–Prasad–Sommerfield State
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In
theoretical physics Theoretical physics is a branch of physics that employs mathematical models and abstractions of physical objects and systems to rationalize, explain and predict natural phenomena. This is in contrast to experimental physics, which uses experim ...
, massive representations of an
extended supersymmetry In theoretical physics, extended supersymmetry is supersymmetry whose Lie group#The Lie algebra associated to a Lie group, infinitesimal generators Q_i^\alpha carry not only a spinor index \alpha, but also an additional index i=1,2 \dots \mathcal w ...
algebra called BPS states have mass equal to the supersymmetry
central charge In theoretical physics, a central charge is an operator ''Z'' that commutes with all the other symmetry operators. The adjective "central" refers to the center of the symmetry group—the subgroup of elements that commute with all other elemen ...
''Z''. Quantum mechanically, if the supersymmetry remains unbroken, exact equality to the modulus of ''Z'' exists. Their importance arises as the supermultiplets shorten for generic massive representations, with stability and mass formula exact.


''d'' = 4 ''N'' = 2

The generators for the odd part of the
superalgebra In mathematics and theoretical physics, a superalgebra is a Z2-graded algebra. That is, it is an algebra over a commutative ring or field with a decomposition into "even" and "odd" pieces and a multiplication operator that respects the grading. T ...
have relations: : \begin \ & = 2 \sigma_^m P_m \delta^A_B\\ \ & = 2 \epsilon_ \epsilon^ \bar\\ \ & = -2 \epsilon_ \epsilon_ Z\\ \end where: \alpha \dot are the Lorentz group indices, A and B are
R-symmetry In theoretical physics, the R-symmetry is the symmetry transforming different supercharges in a theory with supersymmetry into each other. In the simplest case of the ''N''=1 supersymmetry, such an R-symmetry is isomorphic to a global U(1) group o ...
indices. Take linear combinations of the above generators as follows: : \begin R_\alpha^A & = \xi^ Q_\alpha^A + \xi \sigma_^0 \bar^\\ T_\alpha^A & = \xi^ Q_\alpha^A - \xi \sigma_^0 \bar^\\ \end Consider a state ψ which has 4 momentum (M,0,0,0). Applying the following operator to this state gives: : \begin (R_1^1 + (R_1^1)^\dagger )^2 \psi & = 4 ( M + Re(Z\xi^) ) \psi\\ \end But because this is the square of a Hermitian operator, the right hand side coefficient must be positive for all \xi. In particular the strongest result from this is : \begin M \geq , Z, \\ \end


Example applications

* Supersymmetric black hole entropies


See also

* Bogomol'nyi–Prasad–Sommerfield bound * Short supermultiplet *
Wall-crossing In algebraic geometry and string theory, the phenomenon of wall-crossing describes the discontinuous change of a certain quantity, such as an integer geometric invariant, an winding number, index or a space of BPS state, across a codimension-one w ...


References

Supersymmetry {{Quantum-stub