755 research outputs found
Heptagons from the Steinmann Cluster Bootstrap
We reformulate the heptagon cluster bootstrap to take advantage of the
Steinmann relations, which require certain double discontinuities of any
amplitude to vanish. These constraints vastly reduce the number of functions
needed to bootstrap seven-point amplitudes in planar
supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory, making higher-loop contributions to these
amplitudes more computationally accessible. In particular, dual superconformal
symmetry and well-defined collinear limits suffice to determine uniquely the
symbols of the three-loop NMHV and four-loop MHV seven-point amplitudes. We
also show that at three loops, relaxing the dual superconformal ()
relations and imposing dihedral symmetry (and for NMHV the absence of spurious
poles) leaves only a single ambiguity in the heptagon amplitudes. These results
point to a strong tension between the collinear properties of the amplitudes
and the Steinmann relations.Comment: 43 pages, 2 figures. v2: typos corrected; version to appear in JHE
The Enhanced Reading Opportunities Study: Early Impact and Implementation Findings
This report presents early findings from a demonstration and random assignment evaluation of two supplemental literacy programs that aim to improve the reading comprehension skills and school performance of struggling ninth-grade readers. On average, the programs produced a positive, statistically significant impact on reading comprehension among students
Bootstrapping six-gluon scattering in planar super-Yang-Mills theory
We describe the hexagon function bootstrap for solving for six-gluon
scattering amplitudes in the large limit of super-Yang-Mills
theory. In this method, an ansatz for the finite part of these amplitudes is
constrained at the level of amplitudes, not integrands, using boundary
information. In the near-collinear limit, the dual picture of the amplitudes as
Wilson loops leads to an operator product expansion which has been solved using
integrability by Basso, Sever and Vieira. Factorization of the amplitudes in
the multi-Regge limit provides additional boundary data. This bootstrap has
been applied successfully through four loops for the maximally helicity
violating (MHV) configuration of gluon helicities, and through three loops for
the non-MHV case.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables; contribution to the proceedings of
Loops and Legs in Quantum Field Theory, 27 April - 2 May 2014, Weimar,
Germany; v2, reference adde
The one-loop six-dimensional hexagon integral and its relation to MHV amplitudes in N=4 SYM
We provide an analytic formula for the (rescaled) one-loop scalar hexagon
integral with all external legs massless, in terms of classical
polylogarithms. We show that this integral is closely connected to two
integrals appearing in one- and two-loop amplitudes in planar
super-Yang-Mills theory, and . The derivative of
with respect to one of the conformal invariants yields
, while another first-order differential operator applied to
yields . We also introduce some kinematic
variables that rationalize the arguments of the polylogarithms, making it easy
to verify the latter differential equation. We also give a further example of a
six-dimensional integral relevant for amplitudes in
super-Yang-Mills.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Analytic result for the two-loop six-point NMHV amplitude in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory
We provide a simple analytic formula for the two-loop six-point ratio
function of planar N = 4 super Yang-Mills theory. This result extends the
analytic knowledge of multi-loop six-point amplitudes beyond those with maximal
helicity violation. We make a natural ansatz for the symbols of the relevant
functions appearing in the two-loop amplitude, and impose various consistency
conditions, including symmetry, the absence of spurious poles, the correct
collinear behaviour, and agreement with the operator product expansion for
light-like (super) Wilson loops. This information reduces the ansatz to a small
number of relatively simple functions. In order to fix these parameters
uniquely, we utilize an explicit representation of the amplitude in terms of
loop integrals that can be evaluated analytically in various kinematic limits.
The final compact analytic result is expressed in terms of classical
polylogarithms, whose arguments are rational functions of the dual conformal
cross-ratios, plus precisely two functions that are not of this type. One of
the functions, the loop integral \Omega^{(2)}, also plays a key role in a new
representation of the remainder function R_6^{(2)} in the maximally helicity
violating sector. Another interesting feature at two loops is the appearance of
a new (parity odd) \times (parity odd) sector of the amplitude, which is absent
at one loop, and which is uniquely determined in a natural way in terms of the
more familiar (parity even) \times (parity even) part. The second
non-polylogarithmic function, the loop integral \tilde{\Omega}^{(2)},
characterizes this sector. Both \Omega^{(2)} and tilde{\Omega}^{(2)} can be
expressed as one-dimensional integrals over classical polylogarithms with
rational arguments.Comment: 51 pages, 4 figures, one auxiliary file with symbols; v2 minor typo
correction
The Steinmann Cluster Bootstrap for N=4 Super Yang-Mills Amplitudes
We review the bootstrap method for constructing six- and seven-particle
amplitudes in planar super Yang-Mills theory, by exploiting
their analytic structure. We focus on two recently discovered properties which
greatly simplify this construction at symbol and function level, respectively:
the extended Steinmann relations, or equivalently cluster adjacency, and the
coaction principle. We then demonstrate their power in determining the
six-particle amplitude through six and seven loops in the NMHV and MHV sectors
respectively, as well as the symbol of the NMHV seven-particle amplitude to
four loops.Comment: 36 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, 1 ancillary file. Contribution to the
proceedings of the Corfu Summer Institute 2019 "School and Workshops on
Elementary Particle Physics and Gravity" (CORFU2019), 31 August - 25
September 2019, Corfu, Greec
The four-loop remainder function and multi-Regge behavior at NNLLA in planar = 4 super-Yang-Mills theory
We present the four-loop remainder function for six-gluon scattering with maximal helicity violation in planar N = 4 super-Yang-Mills theory, as an analytic function of three dual-conformal cross ratios. The function is constructed entirely from its analytic properties, without ever inspecting any multi-loop integrand. We employ the same approach used at three loops, writing an ansatz in terms of hexagon functions, and fixing coefficients in the ansatz using the multi-Regge limit and the operator product expansion in the near-collinear limit. We express the result in terms of multiple polylogarithms, and in terms of the coproduct for the associated Hopf algebra. From the remainder function, we extract the BFKL eigenvalue at next-to-next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy (NNLLA), and the impact factor at N3LLA. We plot the remainder function along various lines and on one surface, studying ratios of successive loop orders. As seen previously through three loops, these ratios are surprisingly constant over large regions in the space of cross ratios, and they are not far from the value expected at asymptotically large orders of perturbation theory
Crew-Centered Operations: What HAL 9000 Should Have Been
To date, manned space flight has maintained the locus of control for the mission on the ground. Mission control performs tasks such as activity planning, system health management, resource allocation, and astronaut health monitoring. Future exploration missions require the locus of control to shift to on-board due light speed constraints and potential loss of communication. The lunar campaign must begin to utilize a shared control approach to validate and understand the limitations of the technology allowing astronauts to oversee and direct aspects of operation that require timely decision making. Crew-centered Operations require a system-level approach that integrates multiple technologies together to allow a crew-prime concept of operations. This paper will provide an overview of the driving mission requirements, highlighting the limitations of existing approaches to mission operations and identifying the critical technologies necessary to enable a crew-centered mode of operations. The paper will focus on the requirements, trade spaces, and concepts for fulfillment of this capability. The paper will provide a broad overview of relevant technologies including: Activity Planning and Scheduling; System Monitoring; Repair and Recovery; Crew Work Practices
Yangian symmetry of scattering amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory
Tree-level scattering amplitudes in N=4 super Yang-Mills theory have recently
been shown to transform covariantly with respect to a 'dual' superconformal
symmetry algebra, thus extending the conventional superconformal symmetry
algebra psu(2,2|4) of the theory. In this paper we derive the action of the
dual superconformal generators in on-shell superspace and extend the dual
generators suitably to leave scattering amplitudes invariant. We then study the
algebra of standard and dual symmetry generators and show that the inclusion of
the dual superconformal generators lifts the psu(2,2|4) symmetry algebra to a
Yangian. The non-local Yangian generators acting on amplitudes turn out to be
cyclically invariant due to special properties of psu(2,2|4). The
representation of the Yangian generators takes the same form as in the case of
local operators, suggesting that the Yangian symmetry is an intrinsic property
of planar N=4 super Yang-Mills, at least at tree level.Comment: 23 pages, no figures; v2: typos corrected, references added; v3:
minor changes, references adde
Multi-Regge kinematics and the moduli space of Riemann spheres with marked points
We show that scattering amplitudes in planar N = 4 Super Yang-Mills in
multi-Regge kinematics can naturally be expressed in terms of single-valued
iterated integrals on the moduli space of Riemann spheres with marked points.
As a consequence, scattering amplitudes in this limit can be expressed as
convolutions that can easily be computed using Stokes' theorem. We apply this
framework to MHV amplitudes to leading-logarithmic accuracy (LLA), and we prove
that at L loops all MHV amplitudes are determined by amplitudes with up to L +
4 external legs. We also investigate non-MHV amplitudes, and we show that they
can be obtained by convoluting the MHV results with a certain helicity flip
kernel. We classify all leading singularities that appear at LLA in the Regge
limit for arbitrary helicity configurations and any number of external legs.
Finally, we use our new framework to obtain explicit analytic results at LLA
for all MHV amplitudes up to five loops and all non-MHV amplitudes with up to
eight external legs and four loops.Comment: 104 pages, six awesome figures and ancillary files containing the
results in Mathematica forma
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