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      Brane-World Gravity

      review-article
      Living Reviews in Relativity
      Springer International Publishing

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          Abstract

          The observable universe could be a 1 + 3-surface (the “brane”) embedded in a 1 + 3 + d-dimensional spacetime (the “bulk”), with Standard Model particles and fields trapped on the brane while gravity is free to access the bulk. At least one of the d extra spatial dimensions could be very large relative to the Planck scale, which lowers the fundamental gravity scale, possibly even down to the electroweak (∼ TeV) level. This revolutionary picture arises in the framework of recent developments in M theory. The 1 + 10-dimensional M theory encompasses the known 1 + 9-dimensional superstring theories, and is widely considered to be a promising potential route to quantum gravity. General relativity cannot describe gravity at high enough energies and must be replaced by a quantum gravity theory, picking up significant corrections as the fundamental energy scale is approached. At low energies, gravity is localized at the brane and general relativity is recovered, but at high energies gravity “leaks” into the bulk, behaving in a truly higher-dimensional way. This introduces significant changes to gravitational dynamics and perturbations, with interesting and potentially testable implications for high-energy astrophysics, black holes, and cosmology. Brane-world models offer a phenomenological way to test some of the novel predictions and corrections to general relativity that are implied by M theory. This review discusses the geometry, dynamics and perturbations of simple brane-world models for cosmology and astrophysics, mainly focusing on warped 5-dimensional brane-worlds based on the Randall-Sundrum models.

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          Most cited references236

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          A Large Mass Hierarchy from a Small Extra Dimension

          We propose a new higher-dimensional mechanism for solving the Hierarchy Problem. The Weak scale is generated from a large scale of order the Planck scale through an exponential hierarchy. However, this exponential arises not from gauge interactions but from the background metric (which is a slice of AdS_5 spacetime). This mechanism relies on the existence of only a single additional dimension. We demonstrate a simple explicit example of this mechanism with two three-branes, one of which contains the Standard Model fields. The experimental consequences of this scenario are new and dramatic. There are fundamental spin-2 excitations with mass of weak scale order, which are coupled with weak scale as opposed to gravitational strength to the standard model particles. The phenomenology of these models is quite distinct from that of large extra dimension scenarios; none of the current constraints on theories with very large extra dimensions apply.
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            An Alternative to Compactification

            Conventional wisdom states that Newton's force law implies only four non-compact dimensions. We demonstrate that this is not necessarily true in the presence of a non-factorizable background geometry. The specific example we study is a single 3-brane embedded in five dimensions. We show that even without a gap in the Kaluza-Klein spectrum, four-dimensional Newtonian and general relativistic gravity is reproduced to more than adequate precision.
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              The Hierarchy Problem and New Dimensions at a Millimeter

              We propose a new framework for solving the hierarchy problem which does not rely on either supersymmetry or technicolor. In this framework, the gravitational and gauge interactions become united at the weak scale, which we take as the only fundamental short distance scale in nature. The observed weakness of gravity on distances \(\gsim\) 1 mm is due to the existence of \(n \geq 2\) new compact spatial dimensions large compared to the weak scale. The Planck scale \(M_{Pl} \sim G_N^{-1/2}\) is not a fundamental scale; its enormity is simply a consequence of the large size of the new dimensions. While gravitons can freely propagate in the new dimensions, at sub-weak energies the Standard Model (SM) fields must be localized to a 4-dimensional manifold of weak scale "thickness" in the extra dimensions. This picture leads to a number of striking signals for accelerator and laboratory experiments. For the case of \(n=2\) new dimensions, planned sub-millimeter measurements of gravity may observe the transition from \(1/r^2 \to 1/r^4\) Newtonian gravitation. For any number of new dimensions, the LHC and NLC could observe strong quantum gravitational interactions. Furthermore, SM particles can be kicked off our 4 dimensional manifold into the new dimensions, carrying away energy, and leading to an abrupt decrease in events with high transverse momentum \(p_T \gsim\) TeV. For certain compact manifolds, such particles will keep circling in the extra dimensions, periodically returning, colliding with and depositing energy to our four dimensional vacuum with frequencies of \( \sim 10^{12}\) Hz or larger. As a concrete illustration, we construct a model with SM fields localised on the 4-dimensional throat of a vortex in 6 dimensions, with a Pati-Salam gauge symmetry \(SU(4) \times SU(2) \times SU(2)\) in the bulk.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                roy.maartens@port.ac.uk , http://www.tech.port.ac.uk/staffweb/maartenr/
                Journal
                Living Rev Relativ
                Living Rev Relativ
                Living Reviews in Relativity
                Springer International Publishing (Cham )
                1433-8351
                21 June 2004
                21 June 2004
                2004
                : 7
                : 1
                : 7
                Affiliations
                Institute of Cosmology & Gravitation, Portsmouth University, Portsmouth, PO1 2EG UK
                Article
                7
                10.12942/lrr-2004-7
                5255527
                e493935c-dbce-4838-a242-17ca65b42025
                © The Author(s) 2004
                History
                : 29 April 2004
                Categories
                Review Article
                Custom metadata
                © The Author(s) 2004

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