1,602 research outputs found

    Operator mixing in deformed D1D5 CFT and the OPE on the cover

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    We consider the D1D5 CFT near the orbifold point and develop methods for computing the mixing of untwisted operators to first order by using the OPE on the covering surface. We argue that the OPE on the cover encodes both the structure constants for the orbifold CFT and the explicit form of the mixing operators. We show this explicitly for some example operators. We start by considering a family of operators dual to supergravity modes, and show that the OPE implies that there is no shift in the anomalous dimension to first order, as expected. We specialize to the operator dual to the dilaton, and show that the leading order singularity in the OPE reproduces the correct structure constant. Finally, we consider an unprotected operator of conformal dimension (2,2), and show that the leading order singularity and one of the subleading singularies both reproduce the correct structure constant. We check that the operator produced at subleading order using the OPE method is correct by calculating a number of three point functions using a Mathematica package we developed. Further development of this OPE technique should lead to more efficient calculations for the D1D5 CFT perturbed away from the orbifold point.Comment: 23 page

    Some Introductory Words For Two Little Earth Cousins

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    This article is an introduction to the subsequent one by Jodi Latremouille's "My Treasured Relation." It demonstrates that hermeneutic work is always about the application of particular cases to universals, demanding of universals to listen to the difference that the case portends

    Sunflowers, Coyote, and Five Red Hens

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    I feel uneasy stepping into the great territories opened up by Nancy Moules (2017) and Kate Beamer (2017) at the tail end of last year’s Journal of Applied Hermeneutics. It is not (yet) a territory I have endured as deeply. That bracketed “yet” is little more than a feeble attempt at trying to remember not to forget what surrounds us all, whatever its proximity

    Guest Editorial. "The more intense the practice, the more intense the demons": A Few Hermeneutic Caveats

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    In this editorial, I summon something of the intimate dangers of carefully studying and becoming familiar with the slipstreams of lives, both that live in us, and that we, wittingly or otherwise, live within

    Guest Editorial: An Ode to 215 Babies Tossed Away Unmarked

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    Remembering the Babie

    Thoughts on the Return of Yesterday's War

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    Recent American events have tended to energize me and remind me of a wider swath about our circumstances. We find ourselves fighting this issue on methodological, epistemological, and ontological grounds, but it is also a matter of power and market driven distortions, of issues of gender and how marginalization works to blame precisely those it then victimizes, and on and on. In this paper, I take up some of these ideas

    A Failed Attempt to Finish a Thought Left in Mid-Air by Christopher Hitchens

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    This paper is a short reflection on the nature of hermeneutics and the strange joy and burden of writing. It focuses on a particular form of hesitancy, telling, and re-telling found in a short video clip featuring Christopher Hitchens.Keywordshermeneutics, writing, Christopher Hitchen

    Guest Editorial: Writing Hunches and the Horrible Gift of Bells

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    On tinnitus, writing, and hunches..
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