Type IIB Three-Form Fluxes#
In this note we discuss three-form flux compactifications of Type IIB string theory on Calabi-Yau orientifolds \(X_3/\mathcal{O}\) (see Construction of Calabi-Yau geometries for the construction of these geometries). The fluxes generate a scalar potential that stabilises the complex structure moduli and the axio-dilaton through the mechanism reviewed here.
Three-form fluxes and the flux superpotential#
Type IIB string theory contains two three-form field strengths: the Ramond-Ramond (RR) three-form \(F_3 = dC_2\) and the Neveu-Schwarz (NS) three-form \(H_3 = dB_2\). These are quantized: their integrals over integral three-cycles \((A_I, B^J)\) of \(X_3\) take integer values,
The integer-valued vectors \(f = (f^I)\) and \(h = (h_J)\) define the flux quanta. The complexified three-form
combines the two fluxes using the axio-dilaton \(\tau = C_0 + i/g_s\) (with \(g_s\) the string coupling).
The Gukov-Vafa-Witten (GVW) superpotential [hep-th/9906070] reads
In terms of the period vector \(\Pi = (X^I, F_J)\) introduced in (7) and the flux quanta, this becomes
where \(\Sigma\) is the symplectic pairing matrix from (8).
Tadpole cancellation#
The three-form fluxes source D3-brane charge. The flux contribution to the D3-brane tadpole is
Tadpole cancellation — required by the Gauss law constraint in the compact space — constrains the total D3-brane charge:
where \(N_{\rm D3} \geq 0\) counts mobile D3-branes and \(Q_O\) is the orientifold charge, fixed by the geometry. For the trilayer orientifold geometries considered in JAXVacua, one has \(Q_O = 2 + h^{1,1} + h^{2,1}\) (see (2)). A larger \(Q_O\) admits more flux configurations and thus a richer landscape of vacua.
Imaginary self-dual fluxes and SUSY vacua#
SUSY-preserving flux backgrounds require the imaginary self-dual (ISD) condition
Under the Hodge decomposition into \((p,q)\)-type forms, this restricts \(G_3\) to
Supersymmetry additionally requires \(G_3^{(0,3)} = 0\), i.e.\ \(D_\tau W = 0\). The unique SUSY flux configuration is therefore \(G_3 \in H^{(2,1)}_{\rm prim}\).
The F-flatness conditions \(D_i W_{\rm flux} = 0\) (complex structure) and \(D_\tau W_{\rm flux} = 0\) (axio-dilaton) can be collectively expressed as
together with the Hodge-type constraint on \(G_3\). These are the equations solved by the flux vacuum finder in JAXVacua. Non-SUSY flux vacua — where the ISD condition is relaxed — are discussed in Non-supersymmetric flux vacua.
No-scale flux scalar potential#
The flux-induced F-term potential takes the no-scale form
where \(a, \bar{b}\) run over complex structure moduli \(z^i\) and the axio-dilaton \(\tau\) only. This is a consequence of the no-scale identity
satisfied by the classical Kähler potential \(K_K = -2\log\mathcal{V}\): the Kähler moduli F-term contributions exactly cancel the \(-3|W|^2\) term in (1), yielding the positive semi-definite expression (4).
The potential (4) is minimised (to zero) at the ISD locus \(D_a W_{\rm flux} = 0\). This fixes \(z^i\) and \(\tau\), while the Kähler moduli remain as flat directions. Their stabilisation requires quantum corrections and is discussed in Moduli Stabilisation.
The flux landscape#
The flux quanta \((f, h)\) are integer-valued vectors in a lattice of dimension \(b_3 = 2(h^{2,1}+1)\). Subject to the tadpole constraint (2), the number of admissible flux vacua grows as
as estimated by Bousso and Polchinski [hep-th/0004134] and Ashok and Douglas [hep-th/0307049]. For typical Calabi-Yau threefolds this yields an enormous number of vacua — the string landscape — with estimates ranging up to \(\mathcal{O}(10^{272{,}000})\) across the full Kreuzer-Skarke database [2204.02317].
The statistical distribution of physical observables (such as \(|W_0|\)) across this landscape can be studied with the sampling tools in JAXVacua. For applications see Distribution of W_0.