The elliptic genus from split flows and Donaldson-Thomas invariants
DOI10.1007/JHEP05(2010)081zbMath1287.83028arXiv0810.4301MaRDI QIDQ2451957
Andrés Collinucci, Thomas Wyder
Publication date: 27 May 2014
Published in: Journal of High Energy Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/0810.4301
Black holes (83C57) String and superstring theories in gravitational theory (83E30) Calabi-Yau manifolds (algebro-geometric aspects) (14J32) Gromov-Witten invariants, quantum cohomology, Gopakumar-Vafa invariants, Donaldson-Thomas invariants (algebro-geometric aspects) (14N35) String and superstring theories; other extended objects (e.g., branes) in quantum field theory (81T30) Applications of vector bundles and moduli spaces in mathematical physics (twistor theory, instantons, quantum field theory) (14D21)
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Black hole meiosis
- Examples of M5-brane elliptic genera
- Quantum foam and topological strings
- D0-branes in black hole attractors
- A pair of Calabi-Yau manifolds as an exactly soluble superconformal theory.
- The M5-brane elliptic genus: modularity and BPS states
- Topological gravity as large \(N\) topological gauge theory
- \(K\)-theory and Ramond-Ramond charge
- Black hole entropy in M-theory
- A holomorphic Casson invariant for Calabi-Yau 3-folds, and bundles on \(K3\) fibrations.
- Anomalies in string theory with D-branes
- Split states, entropy enigmas, holes and halos
- D-branes, categories and N=1 supersymmetry
- Topological String Theory on Compact Calabi–Yau: Modularity and Boundary Conditions
- Gromov–Witten theory and Donaldson–Thomas theory, I
- Gromov–Witten theory and Donaldson–Thomas theory, II
- Supergravity flows and D-brane stability
- Collapsing D-branes in Calabi-Yau moduli space. I