762 research outputs found
Holographic Nuclei : Supersymmetric Examples
We provide a dual gravity description of a supersymmetric heavy nucleus,
following the idea of our previous paper arXiv:0809.3141. The supersymmetric
nucleus consists of a merginal bound state of baryons distributed over a
ball in 3 dimensions. In the gauge/string duality, the baryon in N=4 super
Yang-Mills (SYM) theory corresponds to a D5-brane wrapping S^5 of the AdS_5 x
S^5 spacetime, so the nucleus corresponds to a collection of D5-branes. We
take a large and a near horizon limits of a back-reacted geometry generated
by the wrapped D5-branes, where we find a gap in the supergravity
fluctuation spectrum. This spectrum is a gravity dual of giant resonances of
heavy nuclei, in the supersymmetric toy example of QCD.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures; v2:a refernce adde
Black Rings, Supertubes, and a Stringy Resolution of Black Hole Non-Uniqueness
In order to address the issues raised by the recent discovery of
non-uniqueness of black holes in five dimensions, we construct a solution of
string theory at low energies describing a five-dimensional spinning black ring
with three charges that can be interpreted as D1-brane, D5-brane, and momentum
charges. The solution possesses closed timelike curves (CTCs) and other
pathologies, whose origin we clarify. These pathologies can be avoided by
setting any one of the charges, e.g. the momentum, to zero. We argue that the
D1-D5-charged black ring, lifted to six dimensions, describes the thermal
excitation of a supersymmetric D1-D5 supertube, which is in the same U-duality
class as the D0-F1 supertube. We explain how the stringy microscopic
description of the D1-D5 system distinguishes between a spherical black hole
and a black ring with the same asymptotic charges, and therefore provides a
(partial) resolution of the non-uniqueness of black holes in five dimensions.Comment: 33 pages, 1 figur
N=1 super Yang-Mills on a (3+1) dimensional transverse lattice with one exact supersymmetry
We formulate =1 super Yang-Mills theory in 3+1 dimensions on a two
dimensional transverse lattice using supersymmetric discrete light cone
quantization in the large- limit. This formulation is free of fermion
species doubling. We are able to preserve one supersymmetry. We find a rich,
non-trivial behavior of the mass spectrum as a function of the coupling
, and see some sort of "transition" in the structure of a bound
state as we go from the weak coupling to the strong coupling. Using a toy model
we give an interpretation of the rich behavior of the mass spectrum. We present
the mass spectrum as a function of the winding number for those states whose
color flux winds all the way around in one of the transverse directions. We use
two fits to the mass spectrum and the one that has a string theory
justification appears preferable. For those states whose color flux is
localized we present an extrapolated value for for some low energy bound
states in the limit where the numerical resolution goes to infinity.Comment: 23(+2 for v3) pages, 19 figures; v2: a footnote added; v3: an
appendix, comments, references added. The version to appear PR
Effects of a fundamental mass term in two-dimensional super Yang-Mills theory
We show that adding a vacuum expectation value to a gauge field left over
from a dimensional reduction of three-dimensional pure supersymmetric
Yang-Mills theory generates mass terms for the fundamental fields in the
two-dimensional theory while supersymmetry stays intact. This is similar to the
adjoint mass term that is generated by a Chern-Simons term in this theory. We
study the spectrum of the two-dimensional theory as a function of the vacuum
expectation value and of the Chern-Simons coupling. Apart from some symmetry
issues a straightforward picture arises. We show that at least one massless
state exists if the Chern-Simons coupling vanishes. The numerical spectrum
separates into (almost) massless and very heavy states as the Chern-Simons
coupling grows. We present evidence that the gap survives the continuum limit.
We display structure functions and other properties of some of the bound
states.Comment: 17 pp., 10 figs; substantially revised version to be published in
Phys. Rev.
The information paradox: conflicts and resolutions
Many relativists have been long convinced that black hole evaporation leads
to information loss or remnants. String theorists have however not been too
worried about the issue, largely due to a belief that the Hawking argument for
information loss is flawed in its details. A recently derived inequality shows
that the Hawking argument for black holes with horizon can in fact be made
rigorous. What happens instead is that in string theory black hole microstates
have no horizons. Thus the evolution of radiation quanta with E ~ kT is
modified by order unity at the horizon, and we resolve the information paradox.
We discuss how it is still possible for E >> kT objects to see an approximate
black hole like geometry. We also note some possible implications of this
physics for the early Universe.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, Latex; (Expanded version of) proceedings for
Lepton-Photon 201
On Exact Supersymmetry in DLCQ
In recent years a supersymmetric form of discrete light-cone quantization
(hereafter `SDLCQ') has emerged as a very powerful tool for solving
supersymmetric field theories. In this scheme, one calculates the light-cone
supercharge with respect to a discretized light-cone Fock basis, instead of
working with the light-cone Hamiltonian. This procedure has the advantage of
preserving supersymmetry even in the discretized theory, and eliminates the
need for explicit renormalizations in 1+1 dimensions. In order to compare the
usual DLCQ prescription with the supersymmetric prescription, we consider two
dimensional SU(N) Yang-Mills theory coupled to a massive adjoint Majorana
fermion, which is known to be supersymmetric at a particular value of the
fermion mass. After studying how singular-valued amplitudes and intermediate
zero momentum modes are regularized in both schemes, we are able to establish a
precise connection between conventional DLCQ and its supersymmetric extension,
SDLCQ. In particular, we derive the explicit form of the (irrelevant)
interaction that renders the DLCQ formulation of the theory exactly
supersymmetric for any light-cone compactification. We check our analytical
results via a numerical procedure, and discuss the relevance of this
interaction when supersymmetry is explicitly broken.Comment: 12 page
D1D5 microstate geometries from string amplitudes
We reproduce the asymptotic expansion of the D1D5 microstate geometries by
computing the emission amplitudes of closed string states from disks with mixed
D1D5 boundary conditions. Thus we provide a direct link between the
supergravity and D-brane descriptions of the D1D5 microstates at non-zero
string coupling. Microscopically, the profile functions characterizing the
microstate solutions are encoded in the choice of a condensate for the twisted
open string states connecting D1 and D5 branes.Comment: 21 pages; added reference
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