We use the recently developed tools for an exact bosonization of a finite
number N of non-relativistic fermions to discuss the classic Tomonaga
problem. In the case of noninteracting fermions, the bosonized hamiltonian
naturally splits into an O(N) piece and an O(1) piece. We show that in the
large-N and low-energy limit, the O(N) piece in the hamiltonian describes a
massless relativistic boson, while the O(1) piece gives rise to cubic
self-interactions of the boson. At finite N and high energies, the low-energy
effective description breaks down and the exact bosonized hamiltonian must be
used. We also comment on the connection between the Tomonaga problem and pure
Yang-Mills theory on a cylinder. In the dual context of baby universes and
multiple black holes in string theory, we point out that the O(N) piece in
our bosonized hamiltonian provides a simple understanding of the origin of two
different kinds of nonperturbative O(e−N) corrections to the black hole
partition function.Comment: latex, 28 pages, 5 epsf figure