2,429 research outputs found
Interpretation of High Energy String Scattering in terms of String Configurations
High energy string scattering at fixed momentum transfer, known to be
dominated by Regge trajectory exchange, is interpreted by identifying families
of string states which induce each type of trajectory exchange. These include
the usual leading trajectory and its daughters as
well as the ``sister'' trajectories and their
daughters. The contribution of the sister to high energy scattering
is dominated by string excitations in the mode. Thus, at large ,
string scattering is dominated by wee partons, consistently with a picture of
string as an infinitely composite system of ``constituents'' which carry zero
energy and momentum.Comment: 14 pages, phyzzx, psfig required, Florida Preprint UFIFT-94-
Electromagnetic fields of a massless particle and the eikonal
Electromagnetic fields of a massless charged particle are described by a
gauge potential that is almost everywhere pure gauge. Solution of quantum
mechanical wave equations in the presence of such fields is therefore immediate
and leads to a new derivation of the quantum electrodynamical eikonal
approximation. The elctromagnetic action in the eikonal limit is localised on a
contour in a two-dimensional Minkowski subspace of four-dimensional space-time.
The exact S-matrix of this reduced theory coincides with the eikonal
approximation, and represents the generalisatin to electrodynamics of the
approach of 't Hooft and the Verlinde's to Planckian scattering.Comment: The missing overdot -- signifying the differentiation
in eqs. (23) and (24) -- is
inserted. Also, obsolete macro has been fixed. Plain TeX, 13 page
Supersymmetry, the Cosmological Constant and a Theory of Quantum Gravity in Our Universe
There are many theories of quantum gravity, depending on asymptotic boundary
conditions, and the amount of supersymmetry. The cosmological constant is one
of the fundamental parameters that characterize different theories. If it is
positive, supersymmetry must be broken. A heuristic calculation shows that a
cosmological constant of the observed size predicts superpartners in the TeV
range. This mechanism for SUSY breaking also puts important constraints on low
energy particle physics models. This essay was submitted to the Gravity
Research Foundation Competition and is based on a longer article, which will be
submitted in the near future
Fundamental Strings as Black Bodies
We show that the decay spectrum of massive excitations in perturbative string
theories is thermal when averaged over the (many) initial degenerate states. We
first compute the inclusive photon spectrum for open strings at the tree level
showing that a black body spectrum with the Hagedorn temperature emerges in the
averaging. A similar calculation for a massive closed string state with winding
and Kaluza-Klein charges shows that the emitted graviton spectrum is thermal
with a "grey-body" factor, which approaches one near extremality. These results
uncover a simple physical meaning of the Hagedorn temperature and provide an
explicit microscopic derivation of the black body spectrum from a unitary
matrix.Comment: some changes in the Discussion section and in the reference list. 11
pages, Late
Exact Gravitational Shockwaves and Planckian Scattering on Branes
We obtain a solution describing a gravitational shockwave propagating along a
Randall-Sundrum brane. The interest of such a solution is twofold: on the one
hand, it is the first exact solution for a localized source on a
Randall-Sundrum three-brane. On the other hand, one can use it to study forward
scattering at Planckian energies, including the effects of the continuum of
Kaluza-Klein modes. We map out the different regimes for the scattering
obtained by varying the center-of-mass energy and the impact parameter. We also
discuss exact shockwaves in ADD scenarios with compact extra dimensions.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures. v2: references added, minor improvements and
small errors correcte
Causality violation, gravitational shockwaves and UV completion
The effective actions describing the low-energy dynamics of QFTs involving
gravity generically exhibit causality violations. These may take the form of
superluminal propagation or Shapiro time advances and allow the construction of
"time machines", i.e. spacetimes admitting closed non-spacelike curves. Here,
we discuss critically whether such causality violations may be used as a
criterion to identify unphysical effective actions or whether, and how,
causality problems may be resolved by embedding the action in a fundamental, UV
complete QFT. We study in detail the case of photon scattering in an
Aichelburg-Sexl gravitational shockwave background and calculate the phase
shifts in QED for all energies, demonstrating their smooth interpolation from
the causality-violating effective action values at low-energy to their
manifestly causal high-energy limits. At low energies, these phase shifts may
be interpreted as backwards-in-time coordinate jumps as the photon encounters
the shock wavefront, and we illustrate how the resulting causality problems
emerge and are resolved in a two-shockwave time machine scenario. The
implications of our results for ultra-high (Planck) energy scattering, in which
graviton exchange is modelled by the shockwave background, are highlighted.Comment: 42 pages, 15 figures, updated reference
Strings in Plane Wave Backgrounds Revisited
String theory in an exact plane wave background is explored. A new example of
singularity in the sense of string theory for nonsingular spacetime metric is
presented. The 4-tachyon scattering amplitude is constructed. The spectrum of
states found from the poles in the factorization turns out to be equivalent to
that of the theory in flat space-time. The massless vertex operator is obtained
from the residue of the first order pole.Comment: 15 pages, GTCRG-8, RevTe
Classical Effective Field Theory for Weak Ultra Relativistic Scattering
Inspired by the problem of Planckian scattering we describe a classical
effective field theory for weak ultra relativistic scattering in which field
propagation is instantaneous and transverse and the particles' equations of
motion localize to the instant of passing. An analogy with the non-relativistic
(post-Newtonian) approximation is stressed. The small parameter is identified
and power counting rules are established. The theory is applied to reproduce
the leading scattering angle for either a scalar interaction field or
electro-magnetic or gravitational; to compute some subleading corrections,
including the interaction duration; and to allow for non-zero masses. For the
gravitational case we present an appropriate decomposition of the gravitational
field onto the transverse plane together with its whole non-linear action. On
the way we touch upon the relation with the eikonal approximation, some
evidence for censorship of quantum gravity, and an algebraic ring structure on
2d Minkowski spacetime.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figures. v4: Duration of interaction is determined in Sec
4 and detailed in App C. Version accepted for publication in JHE
UV-Completion by Classicalization
We suggest a novel approach to UV-completion of a class of non-renormalizable
theories, according to which the high-energy scattering amplitudes get
unitarized by production of extended classical objects (classicalons), playing
a role analogous to black holes, in the case of non-gravitational theories. The
key property of classicalization is the existence of a classicalizer field that
couples to energy-momentum sources. Such localized sources are excited in
high-energy scattering processes and lead to the formation of classicalons. Two
kinds of natural classicalizers are Nambu-Goldstone bosons (or, equivalently,
longitudinal polarizations of massive gauge fields) and scalars coupled to
energy-momentum type sources. Classicalization has interesting phenomenological
applications for the UV-completion of the Standard Model both with or without
the Higgs. In the Higgless Standard Model the high-energy scattering amplitudes
of longitudinal -bosons self-unitarize via classicalization, without the
help of any new weakly-coupled physics. Alternatively, in the presence of a
Higgs boson, classicalization could explain the stabilization of the hierarchy.
In both scenarios the high-energy scatterings are dominated by the formation of
classicalons, which subsequently decay into many particle states. The
experimental signatures at the LHC are quite distinctive, with sharp
differences in the two cases.Comment: 37 page
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