SUMMARY
The discussion centers on the implications of supersymmetry (SUSY) in thermal quantum field theory (QFT), specifically addressing the spontaneous breaking of SUSY at any non-zero temperature. Participants highlight that while SUSY is typically considered preserved at high energy and broken at low energy, the reality is that SUSY is always spontaneously broken at non-zero temperatures due to differing boundary conditions for bosons and fermions. The conversation references A. Das's work, "Supersymmetry and finite temperature," and suggests that the existence of SUSY may still provide solutions to the hierarchy problem, regardless of its actual presence in the early universe.
PREREQUISITES
- Understanding of thermal quantum field theory (QFT)
- Familiarity with supersymmetry (SUSY) concepts
- Knowledge of Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac distributions
- Awareness of the hierarchy problem in particle physics
NEXT STEPS
- Read A. Das's "Supersymmetry and finite temperature" for foundational insights on thermal SUSY.
- Explore recent papers discussing cosmological implications of SUSY, particularly those addressing goldstino mixing.
- Investigate the role of boundary conditions in thermal QFT and their impact on SUSY.
- Study the hierarchy problem in depth to understand the relevance of SUSY in contemporary physics.
USEFUL FOR
This discussion is beneficial for theoretical physicists, cosmologists, and researchers interested in supersymmetry, thermal field theory, and the implications of SUSY on fundamental physics problems.