scholarly journals Conformal techniques, bosonization and tree-level string amplitudes

1987 ◽  
Vol 288 ◽  
pp. 173-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Alan Kostelecký ◽  
Olaf Lechtenfeld ◽  
Wolfgang Lerche ◽  
Stuart Samuel ◽  
Satoshi Watamura
Keyword(s):  
2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (12) ◽  
pp. 1-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrin Becker ◽  
Melanie Becker ◽  
Ilarion V. Melnikov ◽  
Daniel Robbins ◽  
Andrew B. Royston
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pongwit Srisangyingcharoen ◽  
Paul Mansfield

Abstract Plahte identities are monodromy relations between open string scattering amplitudes at tree level derived from the Koba-Nielsen formula. We represent these identities by polygons in the complex plane. These diagrams make manifest the appearance of sign changes and singularities in the analytic continuation of amplitudes. They provide a geometric expression of the KLT relations between closed and open string amplitudes. We also connect the diagrams to the BCFW on-shell recursion relations and generalise them to complex momenta resulting in a relation between the complex phases of partial amplitudes.


2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (38) ◽  
pp. 2857-2870 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. SATHIAPALAN

We extend an earlier proposal for a gauge-invariant description of off-shell open strings (at tree level), using loop variables, to off-shell closed strings (at tree level). The basic idea is to describe the closed string amplitudes as a product of two open string amplitudes (using the technique of Kawai, Lewellen and Tye). The loop variable techniques that were used earlier for open strings can be applied here mutatis mutandis. It is a proposal for a theory whose on-shell amplitudes coincide with those of the closed bosonic string in 26 dimensions. It is also gauge-invariant off-shell. As was the case with the open string, the interacting closed string looks like a free closed string thickened to a band.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 967
Author(s):  
Miriam Bocardo-Gaspar ◽  
Hugo García-Compeán ◽  
Edgar Y. López ◽  
Wilson A. Zúñiga-Galindo

This article is a survey of our recent work on the connections between Koba–Nielsen amplitudes and local zeta functions (in the sense of Gel’fand, Weil, Igusa, Sato, Bernstein, Denef, Loeser, etc.). Our research program is motivated by the fact that the p-adic strings seem to be related in some interesting ways with ordinary strings. p-Adic string amplitudes share desired characteristics with their Archimedean counterparts, such as crossing symmetry and invariance under Möbius transformations. A direct connection between p-adic amplitudes and the Archimedean ones is through the limit p→1. Gerasimov and Shatashvili studied the limit p→1 of the p-adic effective action introduced by Brekke, Freund, Olson and Witten. They showed that this limit gives rise to a boundary string field theory, which was previously proposed by Witten in the context of background independent string theory. Explicit computations in the cases of 4 and 5 points show that the Feynman amplitudes at the tree level of the Gerasimov–Shatashvili Lagrangian are related to the limit p→1 of the p-adic Koba–Nielsen amplitudes. At a mathematical level, this phenomenon is deeply connected with the topological zeta functions introduced by Denef and Loeser. A Koba–Nielsen amplitude is just a new type of local zeta function, which can be studied using embedded resolution of singularities. In this way, one shows the existence of a meromorphic continuations for the Koba–Nielsen amplitudes as functions of the kinematic parameters. The Koba–Nielsen local zeta functions are algebraic-geometric integrals that can be defined over arbitrary local fields (for instance R, C, Qp, Fp((T))), and it is completely natural to expect connections between these objects. The limit p tends to one of the Koba–Nielsen amplitudes give rise to new amplitudes which we have called Denef–Loeser amplitudes. Throughout the article, we have emphasized the explicit calculations in the cases of 4 and 5 points.


2021 ◽  
Vol 382 (2) ◽  
pp. 815-874
Author(s):  
Francis Brown ◽  
Clément Dupont

AbstractWe study open and closed string amplitudes at tree-level in string perturbation theory using the methods of single-valued integration which were developed in the prequel to this paper (Brown and Dupont in Single-valued integration and double copy, 2020). Using dihedral coordinates on the moduli spaces of curves of genus zero with marked points, we define a canonical regularisation of both open and closed string perturbation amplitudes at tree level, and deduce that they admit a Laurent expansion in Mandelstam variables whose coefficients are multiple zeta values (resp. single-valued multiple zeta values). Furthermore, we prove the existence of a motivic Laurent expansion whose image under the period map is the open string expansion, and whose image under the single-valued period map is the closed string expansion. This proves the recent conjecture of Stieberger that closed string amplitudes are the single-valued projections of (motivic lifts of) open string amplitudes. Finally, applying a variant of the single-valued formalism for cohomology with coefficients yields the KLT formula expressing closed string amplitudes as quadratic expressions in open string amplitudes.


1991 ◽  
Vol 06 (10) ◽  
pp. 1719-1747 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. MARTÍN-DELGADO ◽  
J. RAMÍREZ MITTELBRUNN

We propose an off-shell extension of the closed bosonic string scattering amplitudes as functional integrals over bordered Riemann surfaces. The tree level off-shell N-scalars amplitude is handled with the help of Schottky groups and the Burnside θ-series. Using these tools and the asymptotic behaviour of the partition function at the boundary of the moduli space, we show that the off-shell amplitudes exhibit the tachyon mass-shell poles in the external momenta. In addition, their residues are shown to be the semi-off-shell amplitudes and the well-known Koba-Nielsen amplitudes.


1990 ◽  
Vol 05 (04) ◽  
pp. 589-658 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.A. TSEYTLIN

The fixed points of the 2-d renormalization group flow are known to correspond to the tree level string vacua. We analyze how the “renormalization group” (or “sigma model”) approach can be extended to the string loop level. The central role of the condition of renormalizability of the generating functional for string amplitudes with respect to both “local” and “modular” infinities is emphasized. Several one- and two-loop examples of renormalization are discussed. It is found that in order to ensure the renormalizability of the generating functional one is to use “extended” (e.g. Schottky-type) parametrizations of moduli spaces. An approach to a resummation of the string perturbative expansion based on operators of insertion of topological fixtures is suggested.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nima Arkani-Hamed ◽  
Song He ◽  
Thomas Lam

Abstract Canonical forms of positive geometries play an important role in revealing hidden structures of scattering amplitudes, from amplituhedra to associahedra. In this paper, we introduce “stringy canonical forms”, which provide a natural definition and extension of canonical forms for general polytopes, deformed by a parameter α′. They are defined by real or complex integrals regulated with polynomials with exponents, and are meromorphic functions of the exponents, sharing various properties of string amplitudes. As α′→ 0, they reduce to the usual canonical form of a polytope given by the Minkowski sum of the Newton polytopes of the regulating polynomials, or equivalently the volume of the dual of this polytope, naturally determined by tropical functions. At finite α′, they have simple poles corresponding to the facets of the polytope, with the residue on the pole given by the stringy canonical form of the facet. There is the remarkable connection between the α′→ 0 limit of tree-level string amplitudes, and scattering equations that appear when studying the α′→ ∞ limit. We show that there is a simple conceptual understanding of this phenomenon for any stringy canonical form: the saddle-point equations provide a diffeomorphism from the integration domain to the interior of the polytope, and thus the canonical form can be obtained as a pushforward via summing over saddle points. When the stringy canonical form is applied to the ABHY associahedron in kinematic space, it produces the usual Koba-Nielsen string integral, giving a direct path from particle to string amplitudes without an a priori reference to the string worldsheet. We also discuss a number of other examples, including stringy canonical forms for finite-type cluster algebras (with type A corresponding to usual string amplitudes), and other natural integrals over the positive Grassmannian.


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