303 research outputs found
Ten-Dimensional Super-Twistors and Super-Yang-Mills
Four-dimensional super-twistors provide a compact covariant description of
on-shell N=4 d=4 super-Yang-Mills. In this paper, ten-dimensional
super-twistors are introduced which similarly provide a compact covariant
description of on-shell d=10 super-Yang-Mills. The super-twistor variables are
Z=(lambda^alpha, mu_alpha, Gamma^m) where lambda^alpha and mu_alpha are
constrained bosonic d=10 spinors and Gamma^m is a constrained fermionic d=10
vector. The Penrose map relates the twistor superfield Phi(Z) with the d=10
super-Yang-Mills vertex operator lambda^alpha A_alpha(x,theta) which appears in
the pure spinor formalism of the superstring, and the cubic super-Yang-Mills
amplitude is proportional to the super-twistor integral \int dZ Phi_1 Phi_2
Phi_3.Comment: 14 pages harvmac, added short clarificatio
(Non)-Renormalization of the Chiral Vortical Effect Coefficient
We show using diagramtic arguments that in some (but not all) cases, the
temperature dependent part of the chiral vortical effect coefficient is
independent of the coupling constant. An interpretation of this result in terms
of quantization in the effective 3 dimensional Chern-Simons theory is also
given. In the language of 3D dimensionally reduced theory, the value of the
chiral vortical coefficient is related to the formula . We also show that in the presence of dynamical gauge fields, the CVE
coefficient is not protected from renormalization, even in the large limit.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. Version 2 corrects an error and calculates
leading radiative correctio
Improving quality for maternal care - a case study from Kerala, India.
BACKGROUND: The implementation of maternal health guidelines remains unsatisfactory, even for simple, well established interventions. In settings where most births occur in health facilities, as is the case in Kerala, India, preventing maternal mortality is linked to quality of care improvements. CONTEXT: Evidence-informed quality standards (QS), including quality statements and measurable structure and process indicators, are one innovative way of tackling the guideline implementation gap. Having adopted a zero tolerance policy to maternal deaths, the Government of Kerala worked in partnership with the Kerala Federation of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists (KFOG) and NICE International to select the clinical topic, develop and initiate implementation of the first clinical QS for reducing maternal mortality in the state. Description of practice: The NICE QS development framework was adapted to the Kerala context, with local ownership being a key principle. Locally generated evidence identified post-partum haemorrhage as the leading cause of maternal death, and as the key priority for the QS. A multidisciplinary group (including policy-makers, gynaecologists and obstetricians, nurses and administrators) was established. Multi-stakeholder workshops convened by the group ensured that the statements, derived from global and local guidelines, and their corresponding indicators were relevant and acceptable to clinicians and policy-makers in Kerala. Furthermore, it helped identify practical methods for implementing the standards and monitoring outcomes. LESSONS LEARNED: An independent evaluation of the project highlighted the equal importance of a strong evidence-base and an inclusive development process. There is no one-size-fits-all process for QS development; a principle-based approach might be a better guide for countries to adapt global evidence to their local context
Hard thermal loops for soft or collinear external momenta
We consider finite temperature 1-loop diagrams with hard loop momenta and an
arbitrary number of external gauge fields when the external momenta are either
soft, or near the light cone and nearly collinear with the loop momentum. We
obtain a recursion relation for these diagrams which we translate into an
equation for their generating functional. By integrating out the soft fields
while keeping two collinear ones we find an integral equation, originally due
to Arnold, Moore, and Yaffe, which sums the bremsstrahlung and pair
annihilation contribution to the thermal photon production rate.Comment: 17 pages, title corrected, clarifying paragraph added to the
appendix, version to appear in JHE
The momentum analyticity of two-point correlators from perturbation theory and AdS/CFT
The momentum plane analyticity of two point function of a relativistic
thermal field theory at zero chemical potential is explored. A general
principle regarding the location of the singularities is extracted. In the case
of the N=4 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory at large , a qualitative
change in the nature of the singularity (branch points versus simple poles)
from the weak coupling regime to the strong coupling regime is observed with
the aid of the AdS/CFT correspondence.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, typos fixed, 1 figure update
Giant Faraday rotation in single- and multilayer graphene
Optical Faraday rotation is one of the most direct and practically important
manifestations of magnetically broken time-reversal symmetry. The rotation
angle is proportional to the distance traveled by the light, and up to now
sizeable effects were observed only in macroscopically thick samples and in
two-dimensional electron gases with effective thicknesses of several
nanometers. Here we demonstrate that a single atomic layer of carbon - graphene
- turns the polarization by several degrees in modest magnetic fields. The
rotation is found to be strongly enhanced by resonances originating from the
cyclotron effect in the classical regime and the inter-Landau-level transitions
in the quantum regime. Combined with the possibility of ambipolar doping, this
opens pathways to use graphene in fast tunable ultrathin infrared
magneto-optical devices
A note on the boundary contribution with bad deformation in gauge theory
Motivated by recently progresses in the study of BCFW recursion relation with
nonzero boundary contributions for theories with scalars and
fermions\cite{Bofeng}, in this short note we continue the study of boundary
contributions of gauge theory with the bad deformation. Unlike cases with
scalars or fermions, it is hard to use Feynman diagrams directly to obtain
boundary contributions, thus we propose another method based on the SYM theory. Using this method, we are able to write down a useful
on-shell recursion relation to calculate boundary contributions from related
theories. Our result shows the cut-constructibility of gauge theory even with
the bad deformation in some generalized sense.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Non-local symmetries for Yang-Mills theories and their massive counterparts in two and three dimensions
We identify a non-local symmetry for Yang-Mills theories in 1+1 and 2+1
spacetime dimensions. The symmetry mixes a vector current with the gauge field.
The current involved in the symmetry is required to satisfy certain
constraints. The explicit solution for the current obeying these constraints,
is obtained in two spacetime dimensions and in the abelian case in three
dimensions. We conjecture that the current is generated from a non-local gauge
and Lorentz invariant mass term in three dimensions and provide some evidence
for it.
We also posit a conserved current associated with the symmetry generators and
derive some of its properties. In the Abelian case, we compute the symmetry
algebra and show that additional symmetry generators have to be included for
the algebra to close. The algebra contains an SO(2,1) subalgebra. We also
comment on the implications of this symmetry for N=1 supersymmetry.Comment: 18 Page
Dual conformal constraints and infrared equations from global residue theorems in N=4 SYM theory
Infrared equations and dual conformal constraints arise as consistency
conditions on loop amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. These conditions
are linear relations between leading singularities, which can be computed in
the Grassmannian formulation of N=4 super Yang-Mills theory proposed recently.
Examples for infrared equations have been shown to be implied by global residue
theorems in the Grassmannian picture. Both dual conformal constraints and
infrared equations are mapped explicitly to global residue theorems for
one-loop next-to-maximally-helicity-violating amplitudes. In addition, the
identity relating the BCFW and its parity-conjugated form of tree-level
amplitudes, is shown to emerge from a particular combination of global residue
theorems.Comment: 21 page
General Split Helicity Gluon Tree Amplitudes in Open Twistor String Theory
We evaluate all split helicity gluon tree amplitudes in open twistor string
theory. We show that these amplitudes satisfy the BCFW recurrence relations
restricted to the split helicity case and, hence, that these amplitudes agree
with those of gauge theory. To do this we make a particular choice of the
sextic constraints in the link variables that determine the poles contributing
to the contour integral expression for the amplitudes. Using the residue
theorem to re-express this integral in terms of contributions from poles at
rational values of the link variables, which we determine, we evaluate the
amplitudes explicitly, regaining the gauge theory results of Britto et al.Comment: 30 pages, minor misprints correcte
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