94 research outputs found
Holographic Polarons, the Metal-Insulator Transition and Massive Gravity
Massive gravity is holographically dual to `realistic' materials with
momentum relaxation. The dual graviton potential encodes the phonon dynamics
and it allows for a much broader diversity than considered so far. We construct
a simple family of isotropic and homogeneous materials that exhibit an
interaction-driven Metal-Insulator transition. The transition is triggered by
the formation of polarons -- phonon-electron quasi-bound states that dominate
the conductivities, shifting the spectral weight above a mass gap. We
characterize the polaron gap, width and dispersion.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Typos corrected, references added. Presentation
slightly improved. We emphasize that M-I transitions can be obtained both at
constant charge density and at constant chemical potential. Figures updated
with a corrected minor numerical mistake (conclusions unaffected
Naturally light dilatons from nearly marginal deformations
We discuss the presence of a light dilaton in CFTs deformed by a
nearly-marginal operator O, in the holographic realizations consisting of
confining RG flows that end on a soft wall. Generically, the deformations
induce a condensate , and the dilaton mode can be identified as the
fluctuation of . We obtain a mass formula for the dilaton as a certain
average along the RG flow. The dilaton is naturally light whenever i)
confinement is reached fast enough (such as via the condensation of O) and ii)
the beta function is small (walking) at the condensation scale. These
conditions are satisfied for a class of models with a bulk pseudo-Goldstone
boson whose potential is nearly flat at small field and exponential at large
field values. Thus, the recent observation by Contino, Pomarol and Rattazzi
holds in CFTs with a single nearly-marginal operator. We also discuss the
holographic method to compute the condensate , based on solving the
first-order nonlinear differential equation that the beta function satisfies.Comment: 37 pages, 7 figures; v2 typos corrected, references added; v3
comments added in sec. 2.2, footnote 9 adde
Dressed Domain Walls and Holography
The cutoff version of the AdS/CFT correspondence states that the Randall
Sundrum scenario is dual to a Conformal Field Theory (CFT) coupled to gravity
in four dimensions. The gravitational field produced by relativistic domain
walls can be exactly solved in both sides of the correspondence, and thus
provides one further check of it. We show in the two sides that for the most
symmetric case, the wall motion does not lead to particle production of the CFT
fields. Still, there are nontrivial effects. Due to the trace anomaly, the CFT
effectively renormalizes the domain wall tension. On the five dimensional side,
the wall is a codimension 2 brane localized on the Randall-Sundrum brane, which
pulls the wall in a uniform acceleration. This is perceived from the brane as a
domain wall with a tension slightly larger than its bare value. In both cases,
the deviation from General Relativity appears at nonlinear level in the source,
and the leading corrections match to the numerical factors.Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures; references added, minor corrections [v2];
version to appear in JHEP [v3
Non Pauli-Fierz Massive Gravitons
We study general Lorentz invariant theories of massive gravitons. We show
that, contrary to the standard lore, there exist consistent theories where the
graviton mass term violates Pauli-Fierz structure. For theories where the
graviton is a resonance this does not imply the existence of a scalar ghost if
the deviation from Pauli-Fierz becomes sufficiently small at high energies.
These types of mass terms are required by any consistent realization of the DGP
model in higher dimension.Comment: 4 page
Models of non-relativistic quantum gravity: the good, the bad and the healthy
Horava's proposal for non-relativistic quantum gravity introduces a preferred
time foliation of space-time which violates the local Lorentz invariance. The
foliation is encoded in a dynamical scalar field which we call `khronon'. The
dynamics of the khronon field is sensitive to the symmetries and other details
of the particular implementations of the proposal. In this paper we examine
several consistency issues present in three non-relativistic gravity theories:
Horava's projectable theory, the healthy non-projectable extension, and a new
extension related to ghost condensation. We find that the only model which is
free from instabilities and strong coupling is the non-projectable one. We
elaborate on the phenomenology of the latter model including a discussion of
the couplings of the khronon to matter. In particular, we obtain the parameters
of the post-Newtonian expansion in this model and show that they are compatible
with current observations.Comment: 50 pages, JHEP styl
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