Found 5 result(s)
Regular Seminar Georgios au:Papathanasiou'><span class='hl'>Georgios</span> Papathanasiou (City, University of London)
at: 10:30 room LIMS abstract: | Scattering amplitudes provide crucial theoretical input in collider and gravitational wave physics, and at the same time exhibit a remarkable mathematical structure. These lectures will introduce essential concepts and modern techniques exploiting this structure so as to efficiently compute amplitudes and their building blocks, Feynman integrals, in perturbation theory. We will start by decomposing gauge theory amplitudes into simpler pieces based on colour and helicity information. Focusing on tree level, we will then show how these may be determined from their analytic properties with the help of Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten recursion. Moving on to loop level, we will define the the class of polylogarithmic functions amplitudes and integrals often evaluate to, and explain their properties as well as relate them to the universal framework for predicting their singularities, known as the Landau equations. Time permitting, we will also summarise the state of the art in the calculation of the aforementioned singularities, and their intriguing relation to mathematical objects known as cluster algebras. |
Regular Seminar Georgios au:Papathanasiou'><span class='hl'>Georgios</span> Papathanasiou (City, University of London)
at: 10:30 room LIMS abstract: | Scattering amplitudes provide crucial theoretical input in collider and gravitational wave physics, and at the same time exhibit a remarkable mathematical structure. These lectures will introduce essential concepts and modern techniques exploiting this structure so as to efficiently compute amplitudes and their building blocks, Feynman integrals, in perturbation theory. We will start by decomposing gauge theory amplitudes into simpler pieces based on colour and helicity information. Focusing on tree level, we will then show how these may be determined from their analytic properties with the help of Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten recursion. Moving on to loop level, we will define the the class of polylogarithmic functions amplitudes and integrals often evaluate to, and explain their properties as well as relate them to the universal framework for predicting their singularities, known as the Landau equations. Time permitting, we will also summarise the state of the art in the calculation of the aforementioned singularities, and their intriguing relation to mathematical objects known as cluster algebras. |
Regular Seminar Georgios au:Papathanasiou'><span class='hl'>Georgios</span> Papathanasiou (City, University of London)
at: 10:30 room LIMS abstract: | Scattering amplitudes provide crucial theoretical input in collider and gravitational wave physics, and at the same time exhibit a remarkable mathematical structure. These lectures will introduce essential concepts and modern techniques exploiting this structure so as to efficiently compute amplitudes and their building blocks, Feynman integrals, in perturbation theory. We will start by decomposing gauge theory amplitudes into simpler pieces based on colour and helicity information. Focusing on tree level, we will then show how these may be determined from their analytic properties with the help of Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten recursion. Moving on to loop level, we will define the the class of polylogarithmic functions amplitudes and integrals often evaluate to, and explain their properties as well as relate them to the universal framework for predicting their singularities, known as the Landau equations. Time permitting, we will also summarise the state of the art in the calculation of the aforementioned singularities, and their intriguing relation to mathematical objects known as cluster algebras. |
Regular Seminar Georgios au:Papathanasiou'><span class='hl'>Georgios</span> Papathanasiou (City, University of London)
at: 10:30 room LIMS abstract: | Scattering amplitudes provide crucial theoretical input in collider and gravitational wave physics, and at the same time exhibit a remarkable mathematical structure. These lectures will introduce essential concepts and modern techniques exploiting this structure so as to efficiently compute amplitudes and their building blocks, Feynman integrals, in perturbation theory. We will start by decomposing gauge theory amplitudes into simpler pieces based on colour and helicity information. Focusing on tree level, we will then show how these may be determined from their analytic properties with the help of Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten recursion. Moving on to loop level, we will define the the class of polylogarithmic functions amplitudes and integrals often evaluate to, and explain their properties as well as relate them to the universal framework for predicting their singularities, known as the Landau equations. Time permitting, we will also summarise the state of the art in the calculation of the aforementioned singularities, and their intriguing relation to mathematical objects known as cluster algebras. |
Regular Seminar Georgios au:Papathanasiou'><span class='hl'>Georgios</span> Papathanasiou (DESY)
at: 14:00 room G O Jones 610 abstract: | I present recent progress towards determining the planar S-matrix of maximally supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory, thanks to the rich interplay between its perturbative analytic properties in general kinematics, and its integrable structure in special kinematics. The former are related to cluster algebras, and allow for the computation of amplitudes with six/seven gluons up to six/four loops, whereas the latter yields all amplitudes in the multi-Regge limit at finite coupling. |