Dualities between TSTs A number of dualities relate the above theories. The A-model and B-model on two
mirror manifolds are related by
mirror symmetry, which has been described as a
T-duality on a three-torus. The A-model and B-model on the same manifold are conjectured to be related by
S-duality, which implies the existence of several new branes, called NS branes by analogy with the
NS5-brane, which wrap the same cycles as the original branes but in the opposite theory. Also a combination of the A-model and a sum of the B-model and its conjugate are related to topological M-theory by a kind of
dimensional reduction. Here the degrees of freedom of the A-model and the B-models appear to not be simultaneously observable, but rather to have a relation similar to that between position and
momentum in
quantum mechanics.
The holomorphic anomaly The sum of the B-model and its conjugate appears in the above duality because it is the theory whose low energy effective action is expected to be described by Hitchin's formalism. This is because the B-model suffers from a
holomorphic anomaly, which states that the dependence on complex quantities, while classically holomorphic, receives nonholomorphic quantum corrections. In Quantum Background Independence in String Theory,
Edward Witten argued that this structure is analogous to a structure that one finds
geometrically quantizing the space of complex structures. Once this space has been quantized, only half of the dimensions simultaneously commute and so the number of degrees of freedom has been halved. This halving depends on an arbitrary choice, called a
polarization. The conjugate model contains the missing degrees of freedom, and so by tensoring the B-model and its conjugate one reobtains all of the missing degrees of freedom and also eliminates the dependence on the arbitrary choice of polarization.
Geometric transitions There are also a number of dualities that relate configurations with D-branes, which are described by open strings, to those with branes the branes replaced by flux and with the geometry described by the near-horizon geometry of the lost branes. The latter are described by closed strings. Perhaps the first such duality is the
Gopakumar–Vafa duality, which was introduced by
Rajesh Gopakumar and
Cumrun Vafa in On the Gauge Theory/Geometry Correspondence. This relates a stack of N D6-branes on a 3-sphere in the A-model on the deformed
conifold to the closed string theory of the A-model on a resolved conifold with a
B field equal to N times the string coupling constant. The open strings in the A model are described by a U(N) Chern–Simons theory, while the closed string theory on the A-model is described by the Kähler gravity. Although the conifold is said to be resolved, the area of the blown up two-sphere is zero, it is only the B-field, which is often considered to be the complex part of the area, which is nonvanishing. In fact, as the Chern–Simons theory is topological, one may shrink the volume of the deformed three-sphere to zero and so arrive at the same geometry as in the dual theory. The mirror dual of this duality is another duality, which relates open strings in the B model on a brane wrapping the 2-cycle in the resolved conifold to closed strings in the B model on the deformed conifold. Open strings in the B-model are described by dimensional reductions of homolomorphic Chern–Simons theory on the branes on which they end, while closed strings in the B model are described by Kodaira–Spencer gravity.
Dualities with other theories Crystal melting, quantum foam and U(1) gauge theory In the paper Quantum Calabi–Yau and Classical Crystals,
Andrei Okounkov,
Nicolai Reshetikhin and
Cumrun Vafa conjectured that the quantum A-model is dual to a classical melting
crystal at a
temperature equal to the inverse of the string coupling constant. This conjecture was interpreted in Quantum Foam and Topological Strings, by
Amer Iqbal,
Nikita Nekrasov,
Andrei Okounkov and
Cumrun Vafa. They claim that the statistical sum over melting crystal configurations is equivalent to a path integral over changes in spacetime
topology supported in small regions with
area of order the product of the string coupling constant and α'. Such configurations, with spacetime full of many small bubbles, dates back to
John Archibald Wheeler in 1964, but has rarely appeared in
string theory as it is notoriously difficult to make precise. However in this duality the authors are able to cast the dynamics of the quantum foam in the familiar language of a topologically twisted U(1)
gauge theory, whose field strength is linearly related to the Kähler form of the A-model. In particular this suggests that the A-model Kähler form should be quantized. ==Applications==