23,918 research outputs found
Monodromy and Kawai-Lewellen-Tye Relations for Gravity Amplitudes
We are still learning intriguing new facets of the string theory motivated
Kawai-Lewellen-Tye (KLT) relations linking products of amplitudes in Yang-Mills
theories and amplitudes in gravity. This is very clearly displayed in
computations of N=8 supergravity where the perturbative expansion show a vast
number of similarities to that of N=4 super-Yang-Mills. We will here
investigate how identities based on monodromy relations for Yang-Mills
amplitudes can be very useful for organizing and further streamlining the KLT
relations yielding even more compact results for gravity amplitudes.Comment: 6 pages, 12th Marcel Grossman meeting 200
Universality of Low-Energy Scattering in 2+1 Dimensions: The Non Symmetric Case
For a very large class of potentials, , , we
prove the universality of the low energy scattering amplitude, . The result is . The
only exceptions occur if happens to have a zero energy bound state. Our new
result includes as a special subclass the case of rotationally symmetric
potentials, .Comment: 65 pages, Latex, significant changes, new sections and appendice
Explicit Cancellation of Triangles in One-loop Gravity Amplitudes
We analyse one-loop graviton amplitudes in the field theory limit of a
genus-one string theory computation. The considered amplitudes can be
dimensionally reduced to lower dimensions preserving maximal supersymmetry. The
particular case of the one-loop five-graviton amplitude is worked out in detail
and explicitly features no triangle contributions. Based on a recursive form of
the one-loop amplitude we investigate the contributions that will occur at
n-point order in relation to the ``no-triangle'' hypothesis of N=8
supergravity. We argue that the origin of unexpected cancellations observed in
gravity scattering amplitudes is linked to general coordinate invariance of the
gravitational action and the summation over all orderings of external legs.
Such cancellations are instrumental in the extraordinary good ultra-violet
behaviour of N=8 supergravity amplitudes and will play a central role in
improving the high-energy behaviour of gravity amplitudes at more than one
loop.Comment: 25 pages. 2 eps pictures, harvmac format. v2: version to appear in
JHEP. Equations (3.9), (3.12) and minor typos correcte
Absence of Triangles in Maximal Supergravity Amplitudes
From general arguments, we show that one-loop n-point amplitudes in
colourless theories satisfy a new type of reduction formula. These lead to the
existence of cancellations beyond supersymmetry. Using such reduction relations
we prove the no-triangle hypothesis in maximal supergravity by showing that in
four dimensions the n-point graviton amplitude contain only scalar box integral
functions. We also discuss the reduction formulas in the context of gravity
amplitudes with less and no supersymmetry.Comment: 23 pages, RevTeX4 format. v2: Expanded version with a new section
providing some extra background material and an overview of the general
arguments. Minors typos have been corrected. Version to be publishe
An Introduction to Wishart Matrix Moments
These lecture notes provide a comprehensive, self-contained introduction to
the analysis of Wishart matrix moments. This study may act as an introduction
to some particular aspects of random matrix theory, or as a self-contained
exposition of Wishart matrix moments. Random matrix theory plays a central role
in statistical physics, computational mathematics and engineering sciences,
including data assimilation, signal processing, combinatorial optimization,
compressed sensing, econometrics and mathematical finance, among numerous
others. The mathematical foundations of the theory of random matrices lies at
the intersection of combinatorics, non-commutative algebra, geometry,
multivariate functional and spectral analysis, and of course statistics and
probability theory. As a result, most of the classical topics in random matrix
theory are technical, and mathematically difficult to penetrate for non-experts
and regular users and practitioners. The technical aim of these notes is to
review and extend some important results in random matrix theory in the
specific context of real random Wishart matrices. This special class of
Gaussian-type sample covariance matrix plays an important role in multivariate
analysis and in statistical theory. We derive non-asymptotic formulae for the
full matrix moments of real valued Wishart random matrices. As a corollary, we
derive and extend a number of spectral and trace-type results for the case of
non-isotropic Wishart random matrices. We also derive the full matrix moment
analogues of some classic spectral and trace-type moment results. For example,
we derive semi-circle and Marchencko-Pastur-type laws in the non-isotropic and
full matrix cases. Laplace matrix transforms and matrix moment estimates are
also studied, along with new spectral and trace concentration-type
inequalities
Error estimates and convergence rates for the stochastic homogenization of Hamilton-Jacobi equations
We present exponential error estimates and demonstrate an algebraic
convergence rate for the homogenization of level-set convex Hamilton-Jacobi
equations in i.i.d. random environments, the first quantitative homogenization
results for these equations in the stochastic setting. By taking advantage of a
connection between the metric approach to homogenization and the theory of
first-passage percolation, we obtain estimates on the fluctuations of the
solutions to the approximate cell problem in the ballistic regime (away from
flat spot of the effective Hamiltonian). In the sub-ballistic regime (on the
flat spot), we show that the fluctuations are governed by an entirely different
mechanism and the homogenization may proceed, without further assumptions, at
an arbitrarily slow rate. We identify a necessary and sufficient condition on
the law of the Hamiltonian for an algebraic rate of convergence to hold in the
sub-ballistic regime and show, under this hypothesis, that the two rates may be
merged to yield comprehensive error estimates and an algebraic rate of
convergence for homogenization.
Our methods are novel and quite different from the techniques employed in the
periodic setting, although we benefit from previous works in both first-passage
percolation and homogenization. The link between the rate of homogenization and
the flat spot of the effective Hamiltonian, which is related to the
nonexistence of correctors, is a purely random phenomenon observed here for the
first time.Comment: 57 pages. Revised version. To appear in J. Amer. Math. So
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