Modular Forms and SL(2, Z)-covariance of type IIB superstring theory
Abstract
The local higher-derivative interactions that enter into the low-energy expansion of the effective action of type IIB superstring theory with constant complex modulus generally violate the U(1) R-symmetry of IIB supergravity by qU units. These interactions have coefficients that transform as non-holomorphic modular forms under SL(2, Z) transformations with holomorphic and anti-holomorphic weights (w,-w), where qU=-2w. In this paper SL(2, Z)-covariance and supersymmetry are used to determine first-order differential equations on moduli space that relate the modular form coefficients of classes of BPS-protected maximal U(1)-violating interactions that arise at low orders in the low-energy expansion. These are the moduli-dependent coefficients of BPS interactions of the form d2p Pn in linearised approximation, where Pn is the product of n fields that has dimension =8 with qU=8-2n, and p=0, 2 or 3. These first-order equations imply that the coefficients satisfy SL(2, Z)-covariant Laplace eigenvalue equations on moduli space with solutions that contain information concerning perturbative and non-perturbative contributions to superstring amplitudes. For p=3 and n 6 there are two independent modular forms, one of which has a vanishing tree-level contribution. The analysis of super-amplitudes for U(1)-violating processes involving arbitrary numbers of external fluctuations of the complex modulus leads to a diagrammatic derivation of the first-order differential relations and Laplace equations satisfied by the coefficient modular forms. Combining this with a SL(2, Z)-covariant soft axio-dilaton limit that relates amplitudes with different values of n determines most of the modular invariant coefficients, leaving a single undetermined constant.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.