divergence structure
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2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen G. Naculich

Abstract We examine in detail the structure of the Regge limit of the (nonplanar) $$ \mathcal{N} $$ N = 4 SYM four-point amplitude. We begin by developing a basis of color factors Cik suitable for the Regge limit of the amplitude at any loop order, and then calculate explicitly the coefficients of the amplitude in that basis through three-loop order using the Regge limit of the full amplitude previously calculated by Henn and Mistlberger. We compute these coefficients exactly at one loop, through $$ \mathcal{O}\left({\upepsilon}^2\right) $$ O ϵ 2 at two loops, and through $$ \mathcal{O}\left({\upepsilon}^0\right) $$ O ϵ 0 at three loops, verifying that the IR-divergent pieces are consistent with (the Regge limit of) the expected infrared divergence structure, including a contribution from the three-loop correction to the dipole formula. We also verify consistency with the IR-finite NLL and NNLL predictions of Caron-Huot et al. Finally we use these results to motivate the conjecture of an all-orders relation between one of the coefficients and the Regge limit of the $$ \mathcal{N} $$ N = 8 supergravity four-point amplitude.


Author(s):  
Giovanni Alessandrini ◽  
Vincenzo Nesi

Abstract Given a two-dimensional mapping U whose components solve a divergence structure elliptic equation, we give necessary and sufficient conditions on the boundary so that U is a global diffeomorphism.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (29) ◽  
pp. 2050184
Author(s):  
David Berenstein ◽  
Alexandra Miller

We study various corrections of correlation functions to leading order in conformal perturbation theory, both on the cylinder and on the plane. Many problems on the cylinder are mathematically equivalent to those in the plane if we give the perturbations a position dependent scaling profile. The integrals to be done are then similar to those in the study of correlation functions with one additional insertion at the center of the profile. We will be primarily interested in the divergence structure of these corrections when computed in dimensional regularization. In particular, we show that the logarithmic divergences (enhancements) that show up in the plane under these circumstances can be understood in terms of resonant behavior in time dependent perturbation theory, for a transition between states that is induced by an oscillatory perturbation on the cylinder.


Cells ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 1573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farzana Parveen ◽  
Daniel Bender ◽  
Shi-Hui Law ◽  
Vineet Kumar Mishra ◽  
Chih-Chieh Chen ◽  
...  

Human pathologies such as Alzheimer’s disease, type 2 diabetes-induced insulin resistance, cancer, and cardiovascular diseases have altered lipid homeostasis. Among these imbalanced lipids, the bioactive sphingolipids ceramide and sphingosine-1 phosphate (S1P) are pivotal in the pathophysiology of these diseases. Several enzymes within the sphingolipid pathway contribute to the homeostasis of ceramide and S1P. Ceramidase is key in the degradation of ceramide into sphingosine and free fatty acids. In humans, five different ceramidases are known—acid ceramidase, neutral ceramidase, and alkaline ceramidase 1, 2, and 3—which are encoded by five different genes (ASAH1, ASAH2, ACER1, ACER2, and ACER3, respectively). Notably, the neutral ceramidase N-acylsphingosine amidohydrolase 2 (ASAH2) shows considerable differences between humans and animals in terms of tissue expression levels. Besides, the subcellular localization of ASAH2 remains controversial. In this review, we sum up the results obtained for identifying gene divergence, structure, subcellular localization, and manipulating factors and address the role of ASAH2 along with other ceramidases in human diseases.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 438-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yichen Liu ◽  
Monica Marras ◽  
Giovanni Porru

Abstract First we prove a comparison result for a nonlinear divergence structure elliptic partial differential equation. Next we find an estimate of the solution of a boundary value problem in a domain Ω in terms of the solution of a related symmetric boundary value problem in a ball B having the same measure as Ω. For p-Laplace equations, the corresponding result is due to Giorgio Talenti. In a special (radial) case we also prove a reverse comparison result.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 259-269 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Mohammed ◽  
Giovanni Porru

AbstractIn this paper we establish a Harnack inequality for non-negative solutions of {Lu=f(u)} where L is a non-divergence structure uniformly elliptic operator and f is a non-decreasing function that satisfies an appropriate growth conditions at infinity.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 517-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Mohammed ◽  
Giovanni Porru

Abstract Motivated by the work [9], in this paper we investigate the infinite boundary value problem associated with the semilinear PDE {Lu=f(u)+h(x)} on bounded smooth domains {\Omega\subseteq\mathbb{R}^{n}} , where L is a non-divergence structure uniformly elliptic operator with singular lower-order terms. In the equation, f is a continuous non-decreasing function that satisfies the Keller–Osserman condition, while h is a continuous function in Ω that may change sign, and which may be unbounded on Ω. Our purpose is two-fold. First we study some sufficient conditions on f and h that would ensure existence of boundary blow-up solutions of the above equation, in which we allow the lower-order coefficients to be singular on the boundary. The second objective is to provide sufficient conditions on f and h for the uniqueness of boundary blow-up solutions. However, to obtain uniqueness, we need the lower-order coefficients of L to be bounded in Ω, but we still allow h to be unbounded on Ω.


2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (03n04) ◽  
pp. 1430007 ◽  
Author(s):  
YUE-LIANG WU

To understand better the quantum structure of field theory and standard model in particle physics, it is necessary to investigate carefully the divergence structure in quantum field theories (QFTs) and work out a consistent framework to avoid infinities. The divergence has got us into trouble since developing quantum electrodynamics in 1930s. Its treatment via the renormalization scheme is satisfied not by all physicists, like Dirac and Feynman who have made serious criticisms. The renormalization group analysis reveals that QFTs can in general be defined fundamentally with the meaningful energy scale that has some physical significance, which motivates us to develop a new symmetry-preserving and infinity-free regularization scheme called loop regularization (LORE). A simple regularization prescription in LORE is realized based on a manifest postulation that a loop divergence with a power counting dimension larger than or equal to the space–time dimension must vanish. The LORE method is achieved without modifying original theory and leads the divergent Feynman loop integrals well-defined to maintain the divergence structure and meanwhile preserve basic symmetries of original theory. The crucial point in LORE is the presence of two intrinsic energy scales which play the roles of ultraviolet cutoff Mc and infrared cutoff μs to avoid infinities. As Mc can be made finite when taking appropriately both the primary regulator mass and number to be infinity to recover the original integrals, the two energy scales Mc and μs in LORE become physically meaningful as the characteristic energy scale and sliding energy scale, respectively. The key concept in LORE is the introduction of irreducible loop integrals (ILIs) on which the regularization prescription acts, which leads to a set of gauge invariance consistency conditions between the regularized tensor-type and scalar-type ILIs. An interesting observation in LORE is that the evaluation of ILIs with ultraviolet-divergence-preserving (UVDP) parametrization naturally leads to Bjorken–Drell's analogy between Feynman diagrams and electric circuits, which enables us to treat systematically the divergences of Feynman diagrams and understand better the divergence structure of QFTs. The LORE method has been shown to be applicable to both underlying and effective QFTs. Its consistency and advantages have been demonstrated in a series of applications, which includes the Slavnov–Taylor–Ward–Takahaski identities of gauge theories and supersymmetric theories, quantum chiral anomaly, renormalization of scalar interaction and power-law running of scalar mass, quantum gravitational effects and asymptotic free power-law running of gauge couplings.


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