Regular Seminar Yang-Hui He (LIMS and City)
at: 10:30 room LIMS, Royal Institution abstract: | With a view towards constructing Calabi Yau manifolds, we present some rudiments of the intersection between algebraic, differential and arithmetic geometry. Throughout we will take the opposite of the Bourbaki approach and work through explicit examples, rather than to emphasise on the theory. Address: 21 Albemarle St, London W1S 4BS Floor 2: London Institute of Mathematical Sciences (LIMS) |
Regular Seminar Sean Hartnoll (University of Cambridge)
at: 14:00 room Maths MB-503 and zoom abstract: | (Email m.godazgar@qmul.ac.uk for zoom link) Abstract: The exterior dynamics of black holes has played a major role in holographic duality, describing the approach to thermal equilibrium of strongly coupled media. The interior dynamics of black holes in a holographic setting has, in contrast, been largely unexplored. I will describe recent work investigating the classical interior dynamics of various holographic black holes. I will discuss the nature of the singularity, the absence of Cauchy horizons and a new kind of chaotic behavior that emerges in the presence of charged scalar fields. |
Exceptional Seminar Avner Karasik (Cambridge University)
at: 11:00 room GO Jones 610 abstract: | I will present a way to promote the anomalous axial U(1) in 4d QED to an exact symmetry, with the price of losing its invertibility. I will then discuss some applications of this non-invertible U(1) symmetry. In particular, I will show how to couple this non-invertible symmetry to a gauge field. By taking this gauge field to be dynamical, we get a new type of gauge theory with unconventional interactions and constraints. By taking this gauge field to be background, we can study 't-Hooft anomalies of the non-invertible symmetry. |
Regular Seminar Avner Karasik (Cambridge Univ. DAMTP)
at: 13:45 room K0.20 abstract: | 4d gauge theories with massless fermions typically have axial U(1) transformations that suffer from the ABJ anomaly. One can modify the theory of interest by adding more fields in a way that restores the axial symmetry, and use it to derive rigorous 't-Hooft anomaly matching conditions. These conditions are not valid for the original theory of interest, but for the modified theory. I will show that the modification can be done in a specific way that allows us to relate the dynamics of the modified theory to the dynamics of the original theory. In this way, the anomaly matching conditions of the modified theory can be used to learn new things on the original theory even though they involve axial transformations which are not a symmetry of the original theory. In the talk I will describe this method and discuss some applications to various examples. |
Journal Club David Vegh (QMUL)
at: 12:00 room G.O. Jones 610 abstract: | The Liouville equation has many applications: it describes surfaces of constant negative curvature and plays an important role in non-critical string theory. In this talk we discuss how to put the Liouville equation on the lattice in a completely integrable way; it will be possible to follow this talk online (please register at https://london-tqft.vercel.app) |
Regular Seminar Inaki Garcia-Etxebarria (Durham)
at: 14:00 room zoom abstract: | M-theory on spaces with codimension 11-d singularities gives rise to a rich class of d-dimensional field theories. I will discuss how (d+1)-dimensional topological field theories (TFTs) encode the higher symmetries and anomalies of these d-dimensional theories, and how these TFTs can be extracted from the geometry of the singular space. I will illustrate the discussion by analysing some simple examples explicitly. [for zoom link please contact jung-wook(dot)kim(at)qmul(dot)ac(dot)uk] |