Supersymmetric Large Extra Dimensions and the Cosmological Constant: An Update
C.P. Burgess

TL;DR
This paper reviews the supersymmetric large extra dimensions (SLED) approach to solving the cosmological constant problem, discussing its potential, objections, and the need for further technical validation.
Contribution
It critically assesses the SLED proposal, highlighting key objections and outlining necessary future calculations to validate its effectiveness in addressing the cosmological constant problem.
Findings
Plausible reasons exist for the mechanism to overcome objections.
Further technical work is needed to confirm the mechanism's viability.
The prospects for the SLED approach remain promising.
Abstract
This article critically reviews the proposal for addressing the cosmological constant problem within the framework of supersymmetric large extra dimensions (SLED), as recently proposed in hep-th/0304256. After a brief restatement of the cosmological constant problem, a short summary of the proposed mechanism is given. The emphasis is on the perspective of the low-energy effective theory in order to see how it addresses the problem of why low-energy particles like the electron do not contribute too large a vacuum energy. This is followed by a discussion of the main objections, which are grouped into the following five topics: (1) Weinberg's No-Go Theorem. (2) Are hidden tunings of the theory required, and a problem? (3) Why should the mechanism not rule out earlier epochs of inflation? (4) How big are quantum effects, and which are the most dangerous? (5) Can the mechanism be…
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