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{{Short description|Candidate "Theory of Everything"}}
{{Introductory article|M-theory|String theory}}
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▲{{Missing information|article|actual introductory technical information that goes beyond history and popular science content|date=November 2023}}{{String theory|cTopic= Theory}}
{{String theory|cTopic= Theory}}
In non-technical terms, [[M-theory]] presents an idea about the basic substance of the [[universe]]. Although a complete mathematical formulation of M-theory is not known, the general approach is the leading contender for a universal "[[Theory of Everything]]" that unifies gravity with other forces such as [[electromagnetism]]. M-theory aims to unify [[introduction to quantum mechanics|quantum mechanics]] with [[introduction to general relativity|general relativity]]'s gravitational force in a mathematically consistent way. In comparison, other theories such as [[loop quantum gravity]] are considered by [[physicist]]s and researchers
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Five major string theories were developed and found to be mathematically consistent with the principle of all matter being made of strings. Having five different versions of string theory was seen as a puzzle.
Speaking at the
==Status==
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Nevertheless, some physicists are drawn to M-theory because of its degree of uniqueness and rich set of mathematical properties, triggering the hope that it may describe our world within a single framework.
One feature of M-theory that has drawn great interest is that it naturally predicts the existence of the [[graviton]], a [[Spin (physics)|spin-2]] particle hypothesized to mediate the gravitational force. Furthermore, M-theory naturally predicts a phenomenon that resembles [[black hole evaporation]]. Competing unification theories such as [[asymptotically safe gravity]], [[An Exceptionally Simple Theory of Everything|E8 theory]], [[noncommutative geometry]], and [[causal fermion systems]] have not demonstrated any level of mathematical consistency.
==See also==
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