``Electrodynamics in dimensions,'' also known in its early
quantum formulation as ``the Schwinger model'' [14], means different
things to different people. Formally, the action (or Lagrangian) of the
model is the same as that of the familiar Maxwell electrodynamics in
dimensions, hence the name. The physical content, however, is
vastly different. This is because of the stringent kinematical constraints
that exist in
dimensions: since there is no ``transversality'' in
one spatial dimension, the concept of spin is undefined, and the notion of
`` vector field'', massless or massive, is purely formal. Thus, there is no
radiation field associated with the Maxwell tensor. There is, however, the
same background vacuum energy and long range static interaction that we
shall discuss in the next section for the membrane theory in
dimensions.
This is because in one spatial dimension a ``bubble'' degenerates into a
particle-anti particle pair, moving left and right respectively, and the
volume within the bubble is the linear distance between them [15].
Indeed, the main reason for the following discussion
is to make it evident that those very kinematical constraints that
exist in
dimensions are intertwined with the production of mass and
can be induced just as well in
dimensions simply by
increasing the spatial dimensions of the object: from a 0-brane in
dimensions to a 2-brane, or bubble, in
dimensions, indeed, to a
generic
-brane embedded in a target space with
-dimensions.
In other words, the familiar theory of electrodynamics in
dimensions does not represent a unique generalization of the so
called ``electrodynamics in
dimensions''. A more natural extension,
especially from a cosmological standpoint, is the theory of a relativistic
membrane coupled to a three index gauge potential. It is in the framework
of bubble-dynamics, regardless of the dimensionality of the target
space, that the cosmological constant drives the creation of particles of
matter, and the engine of that process, at least at the classical
level, is the ``topological symmetry breaking'' due to the existence of a
boundary in the world history of the membrane.