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Recurrence, Unitarity and Twistors

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Title: From Twistors to Calculations Author: David A. Kosower Last modified by: David A. Kosower Created Date: 7/16/2002 7:26:19 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recurrence, Unitarity and Twistors


1
Recurrence, Unitarity and Twistors
including work with I. Bena, Z. Bern, V. Del
Duca, D. Dunbar, L. Dixon,D. Forde, P.
Mastrolia, R. Roiban
2
  • Weve heard a lot about twistors and about
    amplitudes in gauge theories, N4 supersymmetric
    gauge theory in particular.
  • What are the motivations for studying amplitudes?
  • ? Berns talk

3
Goals of Explicit Calculations of Amplitudes
  • Analytic results
  • Understand structure of results
  • Insight into theory
  • Develop new tools
  • Anomalous dimensions
  • Numerical values to be integrated over phase
    space
  • LHC Physics background to discoveries at the
    energy frontier
  • ? Berns talk
  • Computational complexity of algorithm important

4
Computational Complexity of Tree Amplitudes
  • How many operations (multiplication, addition,
    etc.) does it take to evaluate an amplitude?
  • Textbook Feynman diagram approach factorial
    complexity
  • Color ordering
  • ? exponential complexity
  • O(2n) different helicities at least exponential
    complexity
  • But what about the complexity of each helicity
    amplitude?

5
Recurrence Relations
Berends Giele (1988) DAK (1989)
6
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7
Complexity of Each Helicity Amplitude
  • Same j-point current appears in calculation of Jn
    as in calculation of Jmltn
  • Only a polnoymial number of different currents
    needed
  • O(n4) operations for generic helicity

8
Twistors New Representations for Trees
  • Cachazo-Svrcek-Witten construction ? Svrceks
    talk
  • simple vertices rules
  • Roiban-Spradlin-Volovich representation ?
    Spradlins talk
  • compact representation derived from loops
  • inspired by trees obtained from infrared
    consistency equations
  • Bern, Dixon, DAK
  • Britto-Cachazo-Feng-Witten recurrence ? Brittos
    talk
  • representation in terms of lower-n on-shell
    amplitudes
  • Nice analytic forms
  • In special cases, better than O(n4) operations
  • Probably not the last word

9
Twistors Are an Experimental Subject!
  • Analysis of known results revealed simple
    structure of amplitudes at tree level and one
    loop
  • Cachazo, Svrcek, Witten (2004)
  • Simpler than anticipated in Wittens original
    formulation of twistor string theory
  • Lead to new ideas for calculational techniques
  • ? Svrceks talk
  • No ab initio derivation, so checks and
    independent calculations are essential

10
MHV Amplitudes
  • Pure gluon amplitudes
  • All gluon helicities ? amplitude 0
  • Gluon helicities ? amplitude 0
  • Gluon helicities ? MHV amplitude
  • Parke Taylor (1986)
  • Holomorphic in spinor variables
  • Proved via recurrence relations
  • Berends Giele (1988)

11
CachazoSvrcekWitten Construction
  • Vertices are off-shell continuations of MHV
    amplitudes
  • Connect them by propagators i/K2
  • Draw all diagrams

12
Recursive Formulation
  • Bena, Bern, DAK (2004)
  • Recursive approaches have proven powerful in QCD
    how can we implement one in the CSW approach?

Divide into two sets by cutting propagator
Cant follow a single leg
Treat as new higher-degree vertices
13
  • Higher degree vertices expressed in terms of
    lower-degree ones
  • Compact formula when dressed with external legs

14
Beyond Pure QCD
  • Add Higgs ? Dixons talk
  • Add Ws and Zs
  • Bern, Forde, Mastrolia, DAK (2004)
  • Hybrid formalism build up recursive currents
    using CSW construction
  • W current (W ? electroweak process)
  • along with CSW construction

15
Loop Calculations Textbook Approach
  • Sew together vertices and propagators into loop
    diagrams
  • Obtain a sum over 2n-point 0n-tensor
    integrals, multiplied by coefficients which are
    functions of k and ?
  • Reduce tensor integrals using Brown-Feynman
    Passarino-Veltman brute-force reduction, or
    perhaps Vermaseren-van Neerven method
  • Reduce higher-point integrals to bubbles,
    triangles, and boxes

16
  • Can apply this to color-ordered amplitudes, using
    color-ordered Feynman rules
  • Can use spinor-helicity method at the end to
    obtain helicity amplitudes
  • BUT
  • This fails to take advantage of gauge
    cancellations early in the calculation, so a lot
    of calculational effort is just wasted.

17
Traditional Methods in the N4 One-LoopSeven-Poin
t Amplitude
  • 227,585 diagrams
  • _at_ 1 in2/diagram three bound volumes of Phys.
    Rev. D just to draw them
  • _at_ 1 min/diagram 22 months full-time just to draw
    them
  • So of course one doesnt do it that way

18
Can We Take Advantage
  • Of tree-level recurrence relations?
  • Of new twistor-based ideas for reducing
    computational effort for analytic forms?

19
Unitarity
  • Basic property of any quantum field theory
    conservation of probability. In terms of the
    scattering matrix,
  • In terms of the transition matrix
    we get,
  • or
  • with the Feynman i?

20
  • This has a direct translation into Feynman
    diagrams, using the Cutkosky rules. If we have a
    Feynman integral,
  • and we want the discontinuity in the K2 channel,
    we should replace

21
  • When we do this, we obtain a phase-space integral

22
In the Bad Old Days of Dispersion Relations
  • To recover the full integral, we could perform a
    dispersion integral
  • in which so long as
    when
  • If this condition isnt satisfied, there are
    subtraction ambiguities corresponding to terms
    in the full amplitude which have no
    discontinuities

23
  • But its better to obtain the full integral by
    identifying which Feynman integral(s) the cut
    came from.
  • Allows us to take advantage of sophisticated
    techniques for evaluating Feynman integrals
    identities, modern reduction techniques,
    differential equations, reduction to master
    integrals, etc.

24
Computing Amplitudes Not Diagrams
  • The cutting relation can also be applied to sums
    of diagrams, in addition to single diagrams
  • Looking at the cut in a given channel s of the
    sum of all diagrams for a given process throws
    away diagrams with no cut that is diagrams with
    one or both of the required propagators missing
    and yields the sum of all diagrams on each side
    of the cut.
  • Each of those sums is an on-shell tree amplitude,
    so we can take advantage of all the advanced
    techniques weve seen for computing them.

25
Unitarity Method for Higher-Order Calculations
  • Bern, Dixon, Dunbar, DAK (1994)
  • Proven utility as a tool for explicit one- and
    two-loop calculations
  • Fixed number of external legs
  • All-n equations
  • Tool for formal proofs all-orders collinear
    factorization
  • Yields explicit formulae for factorization
    functions two-loop splitting amplitude
  • Recent work also by Bedford, Brandhuber, Spence,
    Travaglini Britto, Cachazo, Feng Bidder,
    Bjerrum-Bohr, Dixon, Dunbar, Perkins

26
Unitarity-Based Method at One Loop
  • Compute cuts in a set of channels
  • Compute required tree amplitudes
  • Form the phase-space integrals
  • Reconstruct corresponding Feynman integrals
  • Perform integral reductions to a set of master
    integrals
  • Assemble the answer

27
Unitarity-Based Calculations
  • Bern, Dixon, Dunbar, DAK (1994)
  • In general, work in D4-2? ? full answer
  • van Neerven (1986) dispersion relations converge
  • At one loop in D4 for SUSY ? full answer
  • Merge channels rather than blindly summing find
    function w/given cuts in all channels

28
The Three Roles of Dimensional Regularization
  • Ultraviolet regulator
  • Infrared regulator
  • Handle on rational terms.
  • Dimensional regularization effectively removes
    the ultraviolet divergence, rendering integrals
    convergent, and so removing the need for a
    subtraction in the dispersion relation
  • Pedestrian viewpoint dimensionally, there is
    always a factor of (s)?, so at higher order in
    ?, even rational terms will have a factor of
    ln(s), which has a discontinuity

29
Integral Reductions
  • At one loop, all n?5-point amplitudes in a
    massless theory can be written in terms of nine
    different types of scalar integrals
  • boxes (one-mass, easy two-mass, hard
    two-mass, three-mass, and four-mass)
  • triangles (one-mass, two-mass, and three-mass)
  • bubbles
  • In an N4 supersymmetric theory, only boxes are
    needed.

30
Basis in N4 Theory
easy two-mass box
hard two-mass box
31
Example MHV at One Loop
32
  • Start with the cut
  • Use the known expressions for the MHV amplitudes

33
  • Most factors are independent of the integration
    momentum

34
  • We can use the Schouten identity to rewrite the
    remaining parts of the integrand,
  • Two propagators cancel, so were left with a box
    the ?5 leads to a Levi-Civita tensor which
    vanishes
  • Whats left over is the same function which
    appears in the denominator of the box

35
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36
  • We obtain the result,

37
  • Knowledge of basis opens door to new methods of
    computing amplitudes
  • Need to compute only the coefficients
  • Algebraic approach by Cachazo based on
    holomorphic anomaly ? Brittos talk
  • Britto, Cachazo, Feng (2004)
  • Knowledge of basis not required for the
    unitarity-based method

38
Unitarity-Based Method at Higher Loops
  • Loop amplitudes on either side of the cut
  • Multi-particle cuts in addition to two-particle
    cuts
  • Find integrand/integral with given cuts in all
    channels
  • In practice, replace loop amplitudes by their
    cuts too

39
  • Cuts require two propagators to be present
    corresponding to a massive channel
  • Can require more than two propagators to be
    present generalized cuts
  • Break up amplitude into yet smaller and simpler
    pieces more effective recycling of tree
    amplitudes
  • Triple cuts
    Bern, Dixon, DAK (1996)
  • all-n next-to-MHV
    amplitude Bern, Dixon, DAK (2004)

40
Generalized Cuts
  • Isolate different contributions at higher loops
    as well

41
An Amazing Result Planar Iteration Relation
  • Bern, Rozowsky, Yan (1997)
  • Anastasiou, Bern, Dixon, DAK (2003)
  • This should generalize

Ratio to tree
42
  • With knowledge of the integral basis, quadruple
    cut gives general numerical solution for N4
    one-loop coefficients (four equations for
    four-vector specify it)
  • Use complex loop momenta to obtain solution even
    with three-point vertices (which vanish on-shell
    for real momenta)
  • Britto, Cachazo, Feng (2004)

? Brittos talk
43
Loops From MHV Vertices
  • Sew together two MHV vertices
  • Brandhuber, Spence, Travaglini (2004)

44
  • Simplest off-shell continuation lacks i?
    prescription
  • Use alternate form of CSW continuation
  • ?
  • DAK (2004)
  • to map the calculation on to the cut
  • Brandhuber, Spence, Travaglini (2004)

45
One-Loop Seven-Point NMHV Amplitude
  • Bern, Del Duca, Dixon
  • Results remarkably simple (6 pages, each
    coefficient essentially a one-liner) to draw all
    the Feynman diagrams in 6 pages, each would have
    to fit in 1 mm2
  • Structure
  • 3-mass, easy hard 2-mass, 1-mass boxes

46
Seven-Point Coefficients

3-mass
cubic
collinear
Easy 2-mass
planar
multiparticle
Hard 2-mass
47
The All-n NMHV Amplitude in N4
  • Quadruple cuts show that four-mass boxes are
    absent
  • Triple cuts lead to simple expression for
    three-mass box coefficient
  • Triple cuts or soft limits lead to expression for
    hard two-mass box coefficient as a sum of
    three-mass box coefficients
  • Infrared equations lead to expressions for easy
    two-mass (and one-mass) box coefficients as sums
    of three-mass box coefficients

48
Triple Cuts
  • Write down the three vertices, pull out
    cut-independent factor
  • Use Schouten identity to partial fraction second
    factor

49
  • Use another partial fractioning identity with
    cubic denominators
  • Isolate box with three cut momenta and

50
All-n Results Structure
  • ? Dixons talk

51
Infrared Consistency Equations
  • N4 SUSY amplitudes are UV-finite, but still have
    infrared divergences due to soft gluons
  • Leading divergences are universal to a gauge
    theory independent of matter content same as QCD
  • Would cancel in a physical cross-section
  • General structure of one-loop infrared
    divergences
  • Giele Glover (1992) Kunszt, Signer, Trocsanyi
    (1994)

52
  • Examine coefficients of
  • Gives linear relations between coefficients of
    different boxes
  • n (n3)/2 equations enough to solve for easy
    two-mass and one-mass coefficients in terms of
    three-mass and hard two-mass coefficients odd n
  • Alternatively, gives new representation of trees
  • also Roiban, Spradlin, Volovich (2004)
  • Britto, Cachazo, Feng, Witten (2004/5)

53
Infrared Divergences
  • Bena, Bern, Roiban, DAK (2004)
  • BST calculation MHV diagrams map to cuts
  • Generic diagrams have no infrared divergences
  • Only diagrams with a four-point vertex have
    infrared divergences
  • One can define a twistor-space regulator for
    those
  • Separates the issue of infrared divergences from
    the formulation of the string theory

54
Summary
  • Unitarity is the natural tool for loop
    calculations with twistor methods
  • Large body of explicit results useful for both
    phenomenology and twistor investigations
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