1,350 research outputs found
Manifesting Color-Kinematics Duality in the Scattering Equation Formalism
We prove that the scattering equation formalism for Yang-Mills amplitudes can
be used to make manifest the theory's color-kinematics duality. This is
achieved through a concrete reduction algorithm which renders this duality
manifest term-by-term. The reduction follows from the recently derived set of
identities for amplitudes expressed in the scattering equation formalism that
are analogous to monodromy relations in string theory. A byproduct of our
algorithm is a generalization of the identities among gravity and Yang-Mills
amplitudes.Comment: 20 pages, 20 figure
Analytic Representations of Yang-Mills Amplitudes
Scattering amplitudes in Yang-Mills theory can be represented in the
formalism of Cachazo, He and Yuan (CHY) as integrals over an auxiliary
projective space---fully localized on the support of the scattering equations.
Because solving the scattering equations is difficult and summing over the
solutions algebraically complex, a method of directly integrating the terms
that appear in this representation has long been sought. We solve this
important open problem by first rewriting the terms in a manifestly
Mobius-invariant form and then using monodromy relations (inspired by analogy
to string theory) to decompose terms into those for which combinatorial rules
of integration are known. The result is a systematic procedure to obtain
analytic, covariant forms of Yang-Mills tree-amplitudes for any number of
external legs and in any number of dimensions. As examples, we provide compact
analytic expressions for amplitudes involving up to six gluons of arbitrary
helicities.Comment: 29 pages, 43 figures; also included is a Mathematica notebook with
explicit formulae. v2: citations added, and several (important) typos fixe
Scattering Equations and Feynman Diagrams
We show a direct matching between individual Feynman diagrams and integration
measures in the scattering equation formalism of Cachazo, He and Yuan. The
connection is most easily explained in terms of triangular graphs associated
with planar Feynman diagrams in -theory. We also discuss the
generalization to general scalar field theories with interactions,
corresponding to polygonal graphs involving vertices of order . Finally, we
describe how the same graph-theoretic language can be used to provide the
precise link between individual Feynman diagrams and string theory integrands.Comment: 18 pages, 57 figure
Integration Rules for Loop Scattering Equations
We formulate new integration rules for one-loop scattering equations
analogous to those at tree-level, and test them in a number of non-trivial
cases for amplitudes in scalar -theory. This formalism greatly
facilitates the evaluation of amplitudes in the CHY representation at one-loop
order, without the need to explicitly sum over the solutions to the loop-level
scattering equations.Comment: 22 pages, 17 figure
Integration Rules for Scattering Equations
As described by Cachazo, He and Yuan, scattering amplitudes in many quantum
field theories can be represented as integrals that are fully localized on
solutions to the so-called scattering equations. Because the number of
solutions to the scattering equations grows quite rapidly, the contour of
integration involves contributions from many isolated components. In this
paper, we provide a simple, combinatorial rule that immediately provides the
result of integration against the scattering equation constraints for any
M\"obius-invariant integrand involving only simple poles. These rules have a
simple diagrammatic interpretation that makes the evaluation of any such
integrand immediate. Finally, we explain how these rules are related to the
computation of amplitudes in the field theory limit of string theory.Comment: 30 pages, 29 figure
One-loop SYM-supergravity relation for five-point amplitudes
We derive a linear relation between the one-loop five-point amplitude of N=8
supergravity and the one-loop five-point subleading-color amplitudes of N=4
supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures; v2: very minor correction
Note on graviton MHV amplitudes
Two new formulas which express n-graviton MHV tree amplitudes in terms of
sums of squares of n-gluon amplitudes are discussed. The first formula is
derived from recursion relations. The second formula, simpler because it
involves fewer permutations, is obtained from the variant of the Berends,
Giele, Kuijf formula given in Arxiv:0707.1035.Comment: 10 page
Benchmarking acid and base dopants with respect to enabling the ice V to XIII and ice VI to XV hydrogen-ordering phase transitions
Doping the hydrogen-disordered phases of ice V, VI and XII with hydrochloric
acid (HCl) has led to the discovery of their hydrogen-ordered counterparts ices
XIII, XV and XIV. Yet, the mechanistic details of the hydrogen-ordering phase
transitions are still not fully understood. This includes in particular the
role of the acid dopant and the defect dynamics that it creates within the
ices. Here we investigate the effects of several acid and base dopants on the
hydrogen ordering of ices V and VI with calorimetry and X-ray diffraction. HCl
is found to be most effective for both phases which is attributed to a
favourable combination of high solubility and strong acid properties which
create mobile H3O+ defects that enable the hydrogen-ordering processes.
Hydrofluoric acid (HF) is the second most effective dopant highlighting that
the acid strengths of HCl and HF are much more similar in ice than they are in
liquid water. Surprisingly, hydrobromic acid doping facilitates hydrogen
ordering in ice VI whereas only a very small effect is observed for ice V.
Conversely, lithium hydroxide (LiOH) doping achieves a performance comparable
to HF-doping in ice V but it is ineffective in the case of ice VI. Sodium
hydroxide, potassium hydroxide (as previously shown) and perchloric acid doping
are ineffective for both phases. These findings highlight the need for future
computational studies but also raise the question why LiOH-doping achieves
hydrogen-ordering of ice V whereas potassium hydroxide doping is most effective
for the 'ordinary' ice Ih.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Time transients in the quantum corrected Newtonian potential induced by a massless nonminimally coupled scalar field
We calculate the one loop graviton vacuum polarization induced by a massless,
nonminimally coupled scalar field on Minkowski background. We make use of the
Schwinger-Keldysh formalism, which allows us to study time dependent phenomena.
As an application we compute the leading quantum correction to the Newtonian
potential of a point particle. The novel aspect of the calculation is the use
of the Schwinger-Keldysh formalism, within which we calculate the time
transients induced by switching on of the graviton-scalar coupling.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures; detailed calculation of the graviton vacuum
polarization moved to the new Appendix; matches published versio
New Representations of the Perturbative S-Matrix
We propose a new framework to represent the perturbative S-matrix which is
well-defined for all quantum field theories of massless particles, constructed
from tree-level amplitudes and integrable term-by-term. This representation is
derived from the Feynman expansion through a series of partial fraction
identities, discarding terms that vanish upon integration. Loop integrands are
expressed in terms of "Q-cuts" that involve both off-shell and on-shell
loop-momenta, defined with a precise contour prescription that can be evaluated
by ordinary methods. This framework implies recent results found in the
scattering equation formalism at one-loop, and it has a natural extension to
all orders---even non-planar theories without well-defined forward limits or
good ultraviolet behavior.Comment: 4+1 pages, 4 figure
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