Triangle Seminars
Wednesday, 25 Feb 2015
Superconformal Quantum Mechanics, Integrability and Discrete Light-Cone Quantisation
๐ London
Nick Dorey
(DAMTP Cambridge)
Abstract:
I will discuss recent progress in formulating superconformal quantum mechanics models which describe the (2,0) theory and N=4 super Yang-Mills in discrete light-cone quantisation.
I will discuss recent progress in formulating superconformal quantum mechanics models which describe the (2,0) theory and N=4 super Yang-Mills in discrete light-cone quantisation.
Posted by: KCL
Supergravity as a Consistent Quantum Theory?
Tristan Dennen
(NBI)
Abstract:
Supergravity theories were once hoped to provide ultraviolet finite theories of quantum gravity without requiring profoundly new physical frameworks. These hopes faded in the 1980s, but renewed efforts in recent years have uncovered some surprising ultraviolet behaviour. In this talk, I will give an overview of the explicit scattering amplitude calculations in perturbative supergravity over the last few years. In particular cases, there are indications of ultraviolet cancellations not accounted for by known symmetry arguments. I will highlight these cases and give some reasons to be optimistic and some reasons to be pessimistic about supergravity as a contender for a quantum theory of gravity.
Supergravity theories were once hoped to provide ultraviolet finite theories of quantum gravity without requiring profoundly new physical frameworks. These hopes faded in the 1980s, but renewed efforts in recent years have uncovered some surprising ultraviolet behaviour. In this talk, I will give an overview of the explicit scattering amplitude calculations in perturbative supergravity over the last few years. In particular cases, there are indications of ultraviolet cancellations not accounted for by known symmetry arguments. I will highlight these cases and give some reasons to be optimistic and some reasons to be pessimistic about supergravity as a contender for a quantum theory of gravity.
Posted by: IC
Graduate Lectures: M-theory
David Berman
(QMUL)
Abstract:
Graduate Lectures: This short course will cover the origin of M-theory and brane physics with its applications.
Graduate Lectures: This short course will cover the origin of M-theory and brane physics with its applications.
Posted by: QMW