jimmysnyder said:
Hi Pat,
I don't know how to quote your post, so I just repeated it below.
When replying, click on the "QUOTE" button at the bottom of the post you are replying to.
nrqed said:
it is still classical (in the sense of not "quantum fuzzy") and that each piece evolves at a speed below (or equal to) the speed of light. Accepting that, then it seems to me that the existence of a timelike tangent vector everywhere
jimmysnyder said:
The way I think of it is that although we can visualize the world-sheet, and we can think about the plane tangent to the sheet at any point, we cannot trace a curve on the sheet and say that the curve is the world line of any physical point. For the same reason, I don't think we can identify any piece of the world-sheet and view it as the subsheet of a piece of the string.
I see what you are saying and it makes sense. We can't identify a small length element "dl" of the string and keep an eye on it, following it as if it was a point particle. However, the way I think about it is that if we look at a piece of the worldsheet, even though I can't pick out a line and say that this is the worldline of a specific piece of the string, I still can find a tangent vector that is timelike. For this to be possible, all I need to know is that no part of the string will move faster than c.
Again, I agree that I can't say that this timelike vector is tangent to the motion of a specific piece of the string. Still, I think that if none of the pieces moves faster than c, it will be possible to find a timelike vector tangent to the worldsheet. Does that make sense?
Notice that it seems to me that all we can say is that no piece moves faster than c. So I don't seen how to rule out that the tangent vectors be null instead of timelike. That restriction is something I don't understand. And it maybe what you are really worried about.
If your approach were correct, then why would the endpoints be treated special? Indeed, I asked Professor Zwiebach that same question, but he didn't answer me.
I don't know if you mean special in the sense that we can follow the endpoints or special in the sense that it moves at c.
In the first case, the endpoints canactually be followed so we can talk about the worldline of that small piece of string.
On the other hand, as I said above, the exclusion of null tangent vectors is something I don't quite understand. Why can't we say that we can always find vectors tangent to the worldsheet which are either null or timelike (instead of saying that there must be at least one timelike tangent vector)? I don't know. Maybe that's your whole point.
The end points follow worldlines with timelike tangent vectors, so why can't all the points in the string follow the same kind of motion, right? Why can't all the string move at c, without vibrating or spinning, for example? That I don't know.
Pat