Strings and gravity : tying the forces together : proceedings of the fifth Francqui colloquium, 19-21 October 2001, Brussels

Fiche technique

Format : Cartonné
Nb de pages : 306 pages
Poids : 965 g
Dimensions : 19cm X 25cm
Date de parution :
EAN : 9782804140946

Strings and gravity

tying the forces together
proceedings of the fifth Francqui colloquium, 19-21 October 2001, Brussels

de

chez De Boeck

Collection(s) : Bibliothèque scientifique Francqui

Paru le | Cartonné 306 pages

Doctorat

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Quatrième de couverture

Since the revolution initiated by Einstein with his formulation of general relativity, the 20th century has witnessed remarkable developments in our understanding of the gravitational interaction. In particular, emergence of string theory as providing a framework, in which both a microscopic description of gravity and a unification of all fundamental forces might be consistently achieved, is probably one of the main theorical landmarks of the physics of the last fifteen years. Its implications have just begun to be uncovered.

This volume collects the contributions that were discussed at the meeting "Strings and Gravity: Tying the Forces Together", which took place in Brussels from October, 19th to October, 21st, 2001. This meeting gathered most of the top experts in this field for active discussions on the state-of-the-art in gravity, gauge and string theory. The contributions range from black holes and cosmological questions (string-inspired cosmological scenarios, dark energy and the fate of our universe, relaxation of the cosmological constant), to exotic low energy physics with large extra dimensions and more theoretical issues in string theory and quantum gravity (gauge/gravity, duality, D-branes, gauge invariance in cosmological spaces, more formal questions related to unitary and symmetry).

Biographie

Marc Henneaux

Marc Henneaux received his doctoral degree in physics at the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) in 1980. He held successively visiting, postdoctoral and research positions at the Universities of Princeton, Austin (Texas) and at the FNRS (Belgium). He was appointed Professor at the ULB in 1993 and was awarded the Francqui Prize (Belgium) in the year 2000.

Alexander Sevrin

Alexander Sevrin got his physics degree at the University of Leuven. In the following years he held post-doctoral positions at Stony Brook (New York), Berkeley (California) and CERN (Geneva). In 1994 he was appointed as professor at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB).