INSTITUTE FOR THEORETICAL AND MATHEMATICAL PHYSICS

Lomonosov Moscow State University

ITMP Seminar "Trace Anomalies, RG Flow and Scattering Amplitudes"

ITMP Seminar
13 February 2024

Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to announce that the next ITMP seminar will be held on Wednesday, Feb 14, 18:00 (Moscow time). It will be organised via Zoom.

Speaker: Dr. Biswajit Sahoo, King's College London

Title: Trace Anomalies, RG Flow and Scattering Amplitudes

Abstract: I will describe how various vertices and scattering amplitudes, involving background fields, probe trace anomaly coefficients in a four-dimensional (4D) renormalization group (RG) flow. Specifically, I will explain how to couple dilaton and graviton fields to the degrees of freedom of 4D QFT, ensuring the conservation of the Weyl anomaly along the RG flow for the coupled system. By providing dynamics to the dilaton and graviton fields, I will demonstrate that the graviton-dilaton scattering amplitude receives a universal contribution, exhibiting helicity flipping and being proportional to (Δc−Δa) along any RG flow. Here, Δc and Δa represent the differences in the UV and IR CFT c- and a-trace anomalies, respectively. Using a dispersion relation, (Δc−Δa) can be related to spinning massive states in the spectrum of the QFT. We test our proposal through various perturbative examples. Finally, as an application of the proposal of probing the trace anomalies using scattering amplitude, we have derived a non-perturbative bound on the UV CFT a-anomaly coefficient using numerical S-matrix bootstrap program for massive RG flow.

If you want to join the seminar please register here before 16:00, February 14 here.

If you would like to subscribe to newsletters about ITMP seminars, please, contact seminar@itmp.msu.ru

Рубрики:

Наука

Другие новости:

Early Admissions for ITMP Master's Program are now open
Early Admissions for ITMP Master's Program are now open
ITMP Seminar
ITMP Seminar "The Giant Graviton Expansion from Bubbling Geometry"
ITMP Seminar
ITMP Seminar "Gravitational Waves from High Temperature Strings"