AdS/CFT, turbulence and chaos

Lead Research Organisation: Queen Mary University of London
Department Name: Physics

Abstract

Our current understanding of Nature is centered around two theories: general relativity which describes gravity, and quantum field theory which describes the strong and electroweak interactions and various low-energy phenomena. Naive attempts to unify these two theories lead to insurmountable difficulties. Moreover, a unified theory would ideally explain recent cosmological observations such as the acceleration of the universe, dark matter and cosmic inflation. This presents challenges to our understanding that must be addressed by new ideas.

As of today, the best candidate framework for unification is string theory which proposes that matter is not made of point particles, but one-dimensional strings. Although the theory solves the problem of combining gravity with the particle physics, the best understood solutions are ten dimensional. The extra six dimensions may be compactified which presents new challenges.

In the 1990s it has become clear that string theory also contains higher-dimensional objects called ``branes''. Furthermore, different types of string theory arise as limits of a unique theory: M-theory. It is known that in M-theory branes, and not strings, are the fundamental objects. However, a microscopic description of eleven-dimensional M-theory is still missing.

The Centre for Research in String Theory (CRST) at Queen Mary University of London has been at the forefront of research in string theory and quantum field theory. My STFC-funded research at CRST will be focused on the study of string theory. I will investigate two-dimensional toy models in order to unravel the mysteries of black holes in the context of quantum gravity.

Another research direction will be the study of extended objects (strings and branes) with the tools that I have recently developed. Understanding the quantum behavior of branes will be essential for understanding M-theory.

By perturbing strings, one can produce a very interesting phenomenon called wave-turbulence. In many respects, this phenomenon is similar to the fascinating (but more complicated) turbulence that can be observed in real-life fluids with unstable interacting vortices appearing on many scales. I will investigate wave-turbulence and develop analytical tools for describing the system.

Publications

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Blake M (2020) Horizon constraints on holographic Green's functions in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Ceplak N (2021) Pole skipping and Rarita-Schwinger fields in Physical Review D

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Ceplak N (2020) Fermionic pole-skipping in holography in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Chapman S (2023) Complex geodesics in de Sitter space in Journal of High Energy Physics

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David Vegh (2023) The 't Hooft equation as a quantum spectral curve in arxiv.org

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De Boer J (2018) Chaotic Strings in AdS/CFT. in Physical review letters

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Sword L (2022) What lies beyond the horizon of a holographic p-wave superconductor in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Sword L (2022) Kasner geometries inside holographic superconductors in Journal of High Energy Physics

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Vegh D (2021) On compressing sinh-Gordon solutions in arxiv.org

 
Description Amplitudes, Strings and Duality
Amount £890,210 (GBP)
Funding ID ST/T000686/1 
Organisation Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2020 
End 09/2023
 
Description String Theory, Gauge Theory and Duality
Amount £693,834 (GBP)
Funding ID ST/P000754/1 
Organisation Science and Technologies Facilities Council (STFC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2017 
End 09/2020
 
Description Amsterdam collaboration 
Organisation University of Amsterdam
Country Netherlands 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Research in theoretical physics, in particular the holographic study of chaos.
Collaborator Contribution Research in theoretical physics, in particular the holographic study of chaos.
Impact A research paper: "Chaotic Strings in AdS/CFT", Jan de Boer, Eva Llabrés, Juan F. Pedraza, and David Vegh, Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 201604
Start Year 2017
 
Description Cambridge collaboration 
Organisation Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Research in theoretical physics, more specifically in AdS/CFT. Study of the pole-skipping phenomenon in correlation functions of finite-temperature quantum field theories.
Collaborator Contribution Research in theoretical physics, more specifically in AdS/CFT.
Impact A research paper: "Horizon constraints on holographic Green's functions", Mike Blake, Richard A. Davison, David Vegh, JHEP 2001 (2020) 077.
Start Year 2018
 
Description Cambridge collaboration 
Organisation University of Cambridge
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Research in theoretical physics, more specifically in AdS/CFT. Study of the pole-skipping phenomenon in correlation functions of finite-temperature quantum field theories.
Collaborator Contribution Research in theoretical physics, more specifically in AdS/CFT.
Impact A research paper: "Horizon constraints on holographic Green's functions", Mike Blake, Richard A. Davison, David Vegh, JHEP 2001 (2020) 077.
Start Year 2018
 
Description Imperial College collaboration 
Organisation Imperial College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Working to understand and further develop specific "quantum spectral curve" constructions, based on my previous research.
Collaborator Contribution Working to understand and further develop specific "quantum spectral curve" constructions, based on my previous research.
Impact No output yet.
Start Year 2023
 
Description King's College collaboration 
Organisation King's College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Organising an information paradox-themed journal club / seminar series. Collaboration on the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model. Study correlation functions in de Sitter spacetime.
Collaborator Contribution Ongoing research, co-organisation of seminar series.
Impact Research is still ongoing. One published paper so far: "Complex geodesics in de Sitter space" by Shira Chapman (Ben Gurion U. of Negev), Damián A. Galante, Eleanor Harris, Sameer U. Sheorey (King's Coll. London, Dept. Math), David Vegh (Queen Mary, U. of London), DOI: 10.1007/JHEP03(2023)006
Start Year 2020
 
Description UCL Collaboration 
Organisation University College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Study of pair-production and brane nucleation via gauge/gravity duality.
Collaborator Contribution Study of pair-production and brane nucleation via gauge/gravity duality.
Impact One paper has been posted on the arxiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/2101.03143
Start Year 2020
 
Description Uppsala Collaboration 
Organisation Uppsala University
Country Sweden 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Study of the newly discovered generalised Ryu-Takayangi entanglement entropy, the "island" formula for the Page curve, and toy-models of gravity.
Collaborator Contribution Study of the newly discovered generalised Ryu-Takayangi entanglement entropy esp. in higher dimensions.
Impact A related research paper (https://arxiv.org/abs/2112.14177). Although this paper was written without the researcher at Uppsala, writing it was made possible by the collaboration.
Start Year 2020