- Series
- Math Physics Seminar
- Time
- Wednesday, September 28, 2011 - 3:00pm for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Marcus Nanotech Conference
- Speaker
- Henriette Elvang – Physics Department, University of Michigan
- Organizer
- Stavros Garoufalidis
Please Note: Hosted by Predrag Cvitanovic, School of Physics
Particle scattering processes at experiments such as the Large Hadron
Collider at CERN are described by scattering amplitudes. In quantum field
theory classes, students learn to calculate amplitudes using Feynman
diagram methods. This is a wonderful method for a process like electron +
positron -> muon^- + muon^+, but it is a highly challenging for a process
like gluon+gluon -> 5 gluons, which requires 149 diagrams even at the
leading order in perturbation theory. It turns out, however, that the
result for such gluon scattering processes is remarkably simple, in some
cases it is just a single term! This has lead to new methods for
calculating scattering amplitudes, and it has revealed that amplitudes
have
a surprisingly rich mathematical structure. The applications of these new
methods range from calculation of processes relevant for LHC physics to
theoretical explorations of quantum gravity. I will give a pedagogical
introduction to these new approaches to scattering theory and their
applications, not assuming any prior knowledge of quantum field theory or
Feynman rules.