Positivity and the Bootstrap
from
Monday 31 May 2021 (14:30)
to
Wednesday 2 June 2021 (18:00)
Monday 31 May 2021
14:30
Positivity without Boosts: UV/IR Relations for Cosmology
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Scott Melville
Positivity without Boosts: UV/IR Relations for Cosmology
Scott Melville
14:30 - 15:10
Room: ONLINE only
Positivity bounds are a powerful tool which can connect IR phenomenology with the underlying fundamental physics in the UV, but to date their implementation has required Lorentz invariance at all scales. This talk describes recent progress in removing this assumption, deriving a set of bounds which can be applied to systems in which boosts are spontaneously broken, such as cosmology. For example, these new bounds place UV constraints on the shapes of cosmological correlators in the CMB which can arise from the effective field theory of single-field inflation.
15:30
A Timeless History of Time
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Enrico Pajer
(
University of Cambridge
)
A Timeless History of Time
Enrico Pajer
(
University of Cambridge
)
15:30 - 16:10
Room: ONLINE only
Cosmological observations give us the unique opportunity to probe the fundamental laws of physics at very high energies as well as the perturbative regime of quantum gravity. Unfortunately, due to the creativity of theorists and the paucity of data about the primordial universe, there is a huge number of models compatible with all measurements, featuring a wide variety of mechanisms, symmetries, and spectra of particles.The reason can be traced back to the fact that we don't observe the time evolution during inflation, but only its final outcome. In this talk I will report on the recent progress in developing a completely new "bootstrap" approach to derive predictions from the very early universe that make no reference to time and the un-observable time evolution. The bootstrap approach builds directly upon the fundamental pillars of physics. In particular, I will present the recent breakthroughs in understanding the consequence of unitarity for cosmological correlators to all orders in perturbation theory, as well as the footprint of (bulk) locality. I will show how these principles can be used to derive many classical and new inflationary predictions associated with primordial non-Gaussianity in a way that is both computationally simpler and conceptually more transparent. This includes a reconstruction formula that relates de Sitter correlators to amplitudes for massless particles, cosmological partial-energy recursion relations and a "timeless" differential representation of the perturbative wavefunction. This approach makes no reference to de Sitter boosts, which are broken by a large amount in models that predict large non-Gaussianity. Finally I speculate on how these results give us a handle on non-perturbative effects in cosmology either from cosmological positivity bounds or from de Sitter holography.
16:30
On analytic properties of cosmological correlators
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Viktor Gorbenko
On analytic properties of cosmological correlators
Viktor Gorbenko
16:30 - 17:10
Room: ONLINE only
17:30
Discussion
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Claudia de Rham
(
Imperial College London
)
Discussion
Claudia de Rham
(
Imperial College London
)
17:30 - 18:00
Room: ONLINE only
Tuesday 1 June 2021
14:30
Positivity bounds in SMEFT and the inverse problem.
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Cen Zhang
(
Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy Sciences
)
Positivity bounds in SMEFT and the inverse problem.
Cen Zhang
(
Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy Sciences
)
14:30 - 15:10
Room: ONLINE only
15:30
The facets of product moments: from EFThedron to Modularhedron
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yu-tin Huang
The facets of product moments: from EFThedron to Modularhedron
yu-tin Huang
15:30 - 16:10
Room: ONLINE only
16:30
Positive Moments and Loops
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Francesco Riva
Positive Moments and Loops
Francesco Riva
16:30 - 17:10
Room: ONLINE only
17:30
Discussion
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Joao Miguel Augusto Penedones Fernandes
(
EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH)
)
Discussion
Joao Miguel Augusto Penedones Fernandes
(
EPFL - Ecole Polytechnique Federale Lausanne (CH)
)
17:30 - 18:00
Room: ONLINE only
Wednesday 2 June 2021
14:30
Rigorous bounds on the analytic S-matrix
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Andrea Guerrieri
Rigorous bounds on the analytic S-matrix
Andrea Guerrieri
14:30 - 15:10
Room: ONLINE only
In this talk I will introduce a complementary approach to the non-perturbative S-matrix Bootstrap based on duality in optimization theory. In particular, I will focus on the problem of bounding the quartic coupling for gapped theories in 4-dimensions, both from above and below. The bounds obtained rely solely on proven analyticity properties and the numerical problem can be efficiently solved using SDPB.
15:30
Celestial amplitudes: from UV constraints to conformal blocks
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Raclariu Ana-Maria
Celestial amplitudes: from UV constraints to conformal blocks
Raclariu Ana-Maria
15:30 - 16:10
Room: ONLINE only
Celestial amplitudes describe scattering in a basis of boost eigenstates. In this basis, 4-point scattering is characterized by two variables: the sum over the boost weights $\beta$ which is dual to the center of mass energy, and a cross ratio $z$ related to the bulk scattering angle. In this talk I will describe two aspects of the physics captured by the $\beta$ and $z$ dependence. I will first show that the UV behavior of 4-point scattering is encoded in the analytic structure of celestial amplitudes in the complex $\beta$ plane. The residues of the poles at negative even integer $\beta$ are related to coefficients of higher-dimension operators in the low-energy effective action hence subject to positivity constraints, while poles at positive even integer $\beta$ arise from UV asymptotics. I will then show that the $z$ dependence contains information about the celestial spectrum and three-point couplings. For scalar 4-point scattering mediated by massive exchange, the conformal blocks include massive scalar states with positive integer conformal weights, as well as intermediate exchanges of spinning light-ray states.
16:30
Positive sum rules in gravitational EFTs
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Simon Caron-Huot
Positive sum rules in gravitational EFTs
Simon Caron-Huot
16:30 - 17:10
Room: ONLINE only
We explore constraints on low-energy dynamics which stem from assuming causality of 2->2 scattering at all energy scales. I will review a key ingredient added recently: low-energy crossing symmetry, which bounds the couplings of spinning heavy states and ensures that sum rules are dominated by (unknown) states of low spin. Gravity is special since its tree-level energy growth already requires a UV completion. This implies roughly that gravity is attractive at all scales. I describe model-independent constraints which exploit low-energy crossing to account for the graviton pole.
17:30
Discussion
-
Andrew Tolley
(
Imperial College London
)
Discussion
Andrew Tolley
(
Imperial College London
)
17:30 - 18:00
Room: ONLINE only