
TL;DR
This paper reviews brane-world gravity, where our universe is a 3+1-dimensional surface in higher-dimensional space, exploring its theoretical foundations, dynamics, and implications for cosmology and astrophysics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of brane-world models, especially warped 5-dimensional scenarios, highlighting their potential to test predictions of M theory and modifications to general relativity.
Findings
Gravity leaks into the bulk at high energies.
Brane-world models predict observable deviations in cosmology.
Implications for black holes and high-energy astrophysics.
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…
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