Scattering amplitudes, the Ads/CFT correspondence, minimal surfaces, and integrability
Publication:549059
DOI10.1155/2010/703064zbMath1216.81133OpenAlexW1977050217WikidataQ58649945 ScholiaQ58649945MaRDI QIDQ549059
Publication date: 5 July 2011
Published in: Advances in High Energy Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/703064
Supersymmetric field theories in quantum mechanics (81T60) Minimal surfaces in differential geometry, surfaces with prescribed mean curvature (53A10) Yang-Mills and other gauge theories in quantum field theory (81T13) String and superstring theories; other extended objects (e.g., branes) in quantum field theory (81T30) (2)-body potential quantum scattering theory (81U05) Introductory exposition (textbooks, tutorial papers, etc.) pertaining to quantum theory (81-01)
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Scattering into the fifth dimension of \(\mathcal{N} = 4\) super Yang-Mills
- Some comments on spacelike minimal surfaces with null polygonal boundaries in \(AdS_m\)
- An analytic result for the two-loop hexagon Wilson loop in \( \mathcal{N} = 4 \) SYM
- Comments on gluon scattering amplitudes via AdS/CFT
- Thermodynamic bubble ansatz
- Conformal Ward identities for Wilson loops and a test of the duality with gluon amplitudes
- Hexagon Wilson loop = six-gluon MHV amplitude
- The large \(N\) limit of superconformal field theories and supergravity
- A semi-classical limit of the gauge/string correspondence
- The large-\(N\) limit of superconformal field theories and supergravity
- Multi-loop amplitudes and resummation
- Y-system for scattering amplitudes
- Cusp Anomalous Dimension in Maximally Supersymmetric Yang-Mills Theory at Strong Coupling
- Wilson Loops in Large<mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"><mml:mi mathvariant="italic">N</mml:mi></mml:math>Field Theories
- Macroscopic strings as heavy quarks: large-\(N\) gauge theory and anti-de Sitter supergravity
This page was built for publication: Scattering amplitudes, the Ads/CFT correspondence, minimal surfaces, and integrability