Understanding D0-branes and Kappa-Symmetry

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the concept of D0-branes and kappa-symmetry within the context of the Green-Schwarz (GS) formalism, as presented in Becker2Schwarz. Participants explore the implications of kappa-symmetry on the degrees of freedom of fermions and bosons, particularly in relation to superparticles and supersymmetry (SUSY) in both massless and massive cases.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes that D0-branes have 32 complex components for fermions, which reduces to 8 real components due to Majorana-Weyl conditions and kappa-symmetry, raising questions about balancing bosonic and fermionic degrees of freedom.
  • Another participant adds that for massless particles, both RNS and GS formalisms can realize worldline- and targetspace SUSY, with a massless particle having 8 bosonic and 8 fermionic degrees of freedom.
  • There is a discussion about the implications of kappa-symmetry for massive D0-branes, suggesting that it may relate to breaking N=2 SUSY to N=1 SUSY, but the exact nature of this relationship remains unclear.
  • One participant references specific equations (5.18 and 5.15) to highlight how the number of propagating degrees of freedom is determined, indicating that the absence of kappa-symmetry leads to an undefined situation regarding these degrees of freedom.
  • Another participant questions whether kappa-symmetry is solely about matching the number of X- and Theta components or if it is more about ensuring the correct amount of SUSY.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express uncertainty regarding the role of kappa-symmetry in balancing degrees of freedom and its implications for SUSY. Multiple competing views remain on the necessity and function of kappa-symmetry in the context of D0-branes.

Contextual Notes

Participants acknowledge potential confusion between worldsheet SUSY and target space SUSY, and there are references to specific sections in Becker2Schwarz that may not provide clear explanations, particularly regarding the implications of kappa-symmetry for massive D0-branes.

haushofer
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Hi,

I'm reading Becker2Schwarz, chapter 5.1, about D0 branes in the GS formalism. They introduce kappa-symmetry, and end the section with "without this symmetry there would be the wrong number of propagating degrees of freedom".

I'm trying to understand that. The fermions \Theta^a have, for D=10, 2^5=32 complex components. But they are Majorana-Weyl, so this brings this number back to \frac{32}{4}=8 complex components. Kappa-symmetry implies that half of these fermions are gauge degrees of freedom, giving us 8 real components.

However, for the D0-brane, which is a particle, we start with 10 real components X^{\mu}. Choosing e.g. the static gauge brings this back to 9 components. Obviously, to have as many bosonic degrees of freedom as fermionic (8 real), I need to get rid of another bosonic degree of freedom. How do I do that?

Perhaps I'm also confused by worldsheet SUSY versus target space SUSY; to realize target space SUSY on \{\Theta^a,X^{\mu}\} one doesn't need this kappa symmetry, right?

Any help is appreciated :)
 
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Let me add something: for the massless case m=0, one can write down the superparticle in both RNS and GS formalism, and also realize both worldline- and targetspace SUSY. (this is also treated in chapter 4 of BBS). In this case the counting works: a massless particle has 8 bosonic degrees of freedom, and so has the spinor.

For the massive case one realizes target space SUSY via

<br /> \delta \Theta^A = \epsilon^A, \ \ \ \ \delta X^{\mu} = \bar{\epsilon}^A\Gamma^{\mu}\Theta^A<br />
where A=1,...,N labels the amount of SUSY. This algebra implies that a translation P on Theta is zero, so Theta is a zero eigenvector of P, and hence that P is not invertible. Then one doesn't need to have the same amount of X-components and Theta-components, right? I wouldn't know how to realize now wordline supersymmetry.

Maybe this section of BBS is a bit unclear; it now seems to me that this kappa symmetry is not per se about obtaining the same amount of X- and Theta components, but just about obtaining the right amount of SUSY. Does that make sense?
 
haushofer said:
"without this symmetry there would be the wrong number of propagating degrees of freedom"


The number of propagating degrees of freedom are determined by the equation of motion (5.18).
 
And (5.15) for the X, of course. But I can't fully understand what is "wrong" if kappa symmetry is not there for the massive D0-brane. Is it because the D0-brane breaks N=2 SUSY to N=1 SUSY, and that kappa symmetry takes care of this in the GS formalism?
 

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