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Dimensional reduction is the limit of a compactified theory where the size of the compact dimension goes to zero. In physics, a theory in ''D'' spacetime dimensions can be redefined in a lower number of dimensions ''d'', by taking all the fields to be independent of the location in the extra ''D'' − ''d'' dimensions. For example, consider a periodic compact dimension with period ''L''. Let ''x'' be the coordinate along this dimension. Any field \phi can be described as a sum of the following terms: :\phi_n(x) = A_n \cos \left( \frac\right) with ''A''''n'' a constant. According to quantum mechanics, such a term has
momentum In Newtonian mechanics, momentum (more specifically linear momentum or translational momentum) is the product of the mass and velocity of an object. It is a vector quantity, possessing a magnitude and a direction. If is an object's mass an ...
''nh''/''L'' along ''x'', where ''h'' is Planck's constant. Therefore, as L goes to zero, the momentum goes to infinity, and so does the energy, unless ''n'' = 0. However ''n'' = 0 gives a field which is constant with respect to ''x''. So at this limit, and at finite energy, \phi will not depend on ''x''. This argument generalizes. The compact dimension imposes specific
boundary conditions In mathematics, in the field of differential equations, a boundary value problem is a differential equation together with a set of additional constraints, called the boundary conditions. A solution to a boundary value problem is a solution to th ...
on all fields, for example periodic boundary conditions in the case of a periodic dimension, and typically
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or Dirichlet boundary conditions in other cases. Now suppose the size of the compact dimension is ''L''; then the possible eigenvalues under gradient along this dimension are integer or half-integer multiples of 1/''L'' (depending on the precise boundary conditions). In quantum mechanics this eigenvalue is the momentum of the field, and is therefore related to its energy. As ''L'' â†’ 0 all eigenvalues except zero go to infinity, and so does the energy. Therefore, at this limit, with finite energy, zero is the only possible eigenvalue under gradient along the compact dimension, meaning that nothing depends on this dimension. Dimensional reduction also refers to a specific cancellation of divergences in Feynman diagrams. It was put forward by Amnon Aharony, Yoseph Imry, and Shang-keng Ma who proved in 1976 that "to all orders in perturbation expansion, the critical exponents in a ''d''-dimensional (4 < ''d'' < 6) system with short-range exchange and a random quenched field are the same as those of a (''d''–2)-dimensional pure system." Their arguments indicated that the "Feynman diagrams which give the leading singular behavior for the random case are identically equal, apart from combinatorial factors, to the corresponding Feynman diagrams for the pure case in two fewer dimensions." This dimensional reduction was investigated further in the context of supersymmetric theory of Langevin stochastic differential equations by Giorgio Parisi and Nicolas Sourlas who "observed that the most infrared divergent diagrams are those with the maximum number of random source insertions, and, if the other diagrams are neglected, one is left with a diagrammatic expansion for a classical field theory in the presence of random sources... Parisi and Sourlas explained this dimensional reduction by a hidden supersymmetry."


See also

* Compactification (physics) * Kaluza–Klein theory * String theory#Extra dimensions * Supergravity *
Quantum gravity Quantum gravity (QG) is a field of theoretical physics that seeks to describe gravity according to the principles of quantum mechanics; it deals with environments in which neither gravitational nor quantum effects can be ignored, such as in the vi ...
*
Supersymmetric theory of stochastic dynamics Supersymmetric theory of stochastic dynamics or stochastics (STS) is an exact theory of stochastic (partial) differential equations (SDEs), the class of mathematical models with the widest applicability covering, in particular, all continuous time ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dimensional Reduction String theory Quantum field theory Supersymmetry