Abstract:
There is a taxonomy of different kinds of lower-dimensional effective field
theory on brane configurations, depending on the boundary conditions imposed
near the brane worldvolume. Branes with a certain degree of unbroken
supersymmetry can embody consistent Kaluza-Klein truncations to braneworld
supergravity theories with that degree of supersymmetry, and arbitrarily
nonlinear solutions of such lower-dimensional braneworld supergravities can be
found. This applies only to solutions purely within that pure supergravity,
however — external sources give rise to responses in structure characteristic of
the higher dimensional theory. There exists another taxonomic type, however,
in which a genuine concentration of gravity can occur for more general
sources, depending on details of the wave equation for modes transverse to
the brane worldvolume, implemented by a set of boundary conditions different
from the standard Kaluza-Klein ones. Such a genuine concentration does not
correspond to a KK consistent truncation, but does give rise to an effective
lower-dimensional gravitational theory – revealed, for example, in a transition
from higher-dimensional near-field behaviour to lower-dimensional far-field
behaviour.