• Featured in Physics
  • Milestone

An Alternative to Compactification

Lisa Randall and Raman Sundrum
Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 4690 – Published 6 December 1999
Physics logo
An article within the collection: Letters from the Past - A PRL Retrospective
PDFExport Citation

Abstract

Conventional wisdom states that Newton's force law implies only four noncompact dimensions. We demonstrate that this is not necessarily true in the presence of a nonfactorizable background geometry. The specific example we study is a single 3-brane embedded in five dimensions. We show that even without a gap in the Kaluza-Klein spectrum, four-dimensional Newtonian and general relativistic gravity is reproduced to more than adequate precision.

  • Received 15 July 1999

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.83.4690

©1999 American Physical Society

Collections

This article appears in the following collection:

Letters from the Past - A PRL Retrospective

2008 marked PRL’s 50th anniversary. As part of the celebrations a collection of milestone Letters was started. The collection contains Letters that have made long-lived contributions to physics, either by announcing significant discoveries, or by initiating new areas of research.

Authors & Affiliations

Lisa Randall*

  • Joseph Henry Laboratories, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08543
  • and Center for Theoretical Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Raman Sundrum

  • Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts 02215

  • *Electronic address: randall@baxter.mit.edu
  • Electronic address: sundrum@budoe.bu.edu

See Also

An Invisible Dimension

Phys. Rev. Focus 4, 28 (1999)

References (Subscription Required)

Click to Expand
Issue

Vol. 83, Iss. 23 — 6 December 1999

Reuse & Permissions
Access Options
Author publication services for translation and copyediting assistance advertisement

Authorization Required


×
×

Images

×

Sign up to receive regular email alerts from Physical Review Letters

Log In

Cancel
×

Search


Article Lookup

Paste a citation or DOI

Enter a citation
×