37,610 research outputs found
Anomaly Cancellations in Brane Tilings
We re-interpret the anomaly cancellation conditions for the gauge symmetries
and the baryonic flavor symmetries in quiver gauge theories realized by the
brane tilings from the viewpoint of flux conservation on branes.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX; v2: minor corrections, a note on the zero-form flux
adde
D-brane Instantons as Gauge Instantons in Orientifolds of Chiral Quiver Theories
Systems of D3-branes at orientifold singularities can receive
non-perturbative D-brane instanton corrections, inducing field theory operators
in the 4d effective theory. In certain non-chiral examples, these systems have
been realized as the infrared endpoint of a Seiberg duality cascade, in which
the D-brane instanton effects arise from strong gauge theory dynamics. We
present the first UV duality cascade completion of chiral D3-brane theories, in
which the D-brane instantons arise from gauge theory dynamics. Chiral examples
are interesting because the instanton fermion zero mode sector is topologically
protected, and therefore lead to more robust setups. As an application of our
results, we provide a UV completion of certain D-brane orientifold systems
recently claimed to produce conformal field theories with conformal invariance
broken only by D-brane instantons.Comment: 50 pages, 32 figures. v2: version published in JHEP with references
adde
Global symmetries and 't Hooft anomalies in brane tilings
We investigate the relation between gauge theories and brane configurations
described by brane tilings. We identify U(1)_B (baryonic), U(1)_M (mesonic),
and U(1)_R global symmetries in gauge theories with gauge symmetries in the
brane configurations. We also show that U(1)_MU(1)_B^2 and U(1)_RU(1)_B^2 't
Hooft anomalies are reproduced as gauge transformations of the classical brane
action.Comment: 41 pages, 6 figure
Observing quantum non-locality in the entanglement between modes of massive particles
We consider the question of whether it is possible to use the entanglement
between spatially separated modes of massive particles to observe nonlocal
quantum correlations. Mode entanglement can be obtained using a single
particle, indicating that it requires careful consideration before concluding
whether experimental observation, e.g. violation of Bell inequalities, is
possible or not. In the simplest setups analogous to optics experiments, that
observation is prohibited by fundamental conservation laws. However, we show
that using auxiliary particles, mode entanglement can be converted into forms
that allow the observation of quantum non-locality. The probability of
successful conversion depends on the nature and number of auxiliary particles
used. In particular, we find that an auxiliary Bose-Einstein condensate allows
the conversion arbitrarily many times with a small error that depends only on
the initial state of the condensate.Comment: 8 pages (two-column), 2 figure
Recommended from our members
A quantum theoretical explanation for probability judgment errors
A quantum probability model is introduced and used to explain human probability judgment errors including the conjunction, disjunction, inverse, and conditional fallacies, as well as unpacking effects and partitioning effects. Quantum probability theory is a general and coherent theory based on a set of (von Neumann) axioms which relax some of the constraints underlying classic (Kolmogorov) probability theory. The quantum model is compared and contrasted with other competing explanations for these judgment errors including the representativeness heuristic, the averaging model, and a memory retrieval model for probability judgments. The quantum model also provides ways to extend Bayesian, fuzzy set, and fuzzy trace theories. We conclude that quantum information processing principles provide a viable and promising new way to understand human judgment and reasoning
On Dimer Models and Closed String Theories
We study some aspects of the recently discovered connection between dimer
models and D-brane gauge theories. We argue that dimer models are also
naturally related to closed string theories on non compact orbifolds of \BC^2
and \BC^3, via their twisted sector R charges, and show that perfect
matchings in dimer models correspond to twisted sector states in the closed
string theory. We also use this formalism to study the combinatorics of some
unstable orbifolds of \BC^2.Comment: 1 + 25 pages, LaTeX, 11 epsf figure
- …