String theory: Difference between revisions

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In 1992, [[Richard Borcherds]] constructed a bridge between the theory of modular functions and finite groups and, in the process, explained the observations of McKay and Thompson.<ref>[[#Gannon|Gannon]], p. 8</ref><ref name=Borcherds/> Borcherds' work used ideas from string theory in an essential way, extending earlier results of [[Igor Frenkel]], [[James Lepowsky]], and [[Arne Meurman]], who had realized the monster group as the symmetries of a particular{{which|date=February 2016}} version of string theory.<ref name=FLM/> In 1998, Borcherds was awarded the [[Fields medal]] for his work.<ref>[[#Gannon|Gannon]], p. 11</ref>
 
Since the 1990s, the connection between string theory and moonshine has led to further results in mathematics and physics.<ref name="Klarreich 2015"/> In 2010, physicists [[Tohru Eguchi]], [[Hirosi Ooguri]], and [[Yuji Tachikawa (physicist)|Yuji Tachikawa]] discovered connections between a different sporadic group, the [[Mathieu group M24|Mathieu group {{math|''M''<sub>24</sub>}}]], and a certain version{{which|date=November 2016}} of string theory.<ref name=EOT/> [[Miranda Cheng]], John Duncan, and [[Jeffrey A. Harvey]] proposed a generalization of this moonshine phenomenon called [[umbral moonshine]],<ref name=CDH/> and their conjecture was proved mathematically by Duncan, Michael Griffin, and [[Ken Ono]].<ref name=DGO/> Witten has also speculated that the version of string theory appearing in monstrous moonshine might be related to a certain simplified model of gravity in three spacetime dimensions.<ref name=Witten2007/>
 
== History ==