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Bulk geometry in gauge/gravity duality and color degrees of freedom

Masanori Hanada

2021Physical review. D/Physical review. D.21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

$\mathrm{U}(N)$ supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory naturally appears as the low-energy effective theory of a system of $N$ D-branes and open strings between them. Transverse spatial directions emerge from scalar fields, which are $N\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}N$ matrices with color indices; roughly speaking, the eigenvalues are the locations of D-branes. In the past, it was argued that this simple ``emergent space'' picture cannot be used in the context of gauge/gravity duality, because the ground-state wave function delocalizes at large $N$, leading to a conflict with the locality in the bulk geometry. In this paper, we show that this conventional wisdom is not correct: the ground-state wave function does not delocalize, and there is no conflict with the locality of the bulk geometry. This conclusion is obtained by clarifying the meaning of the ``diagonalization of a matrix'' in Yang-Mills theory, which is not as obvious as one might think. This observation opens up the prospect of characterizing the bulk geometry via the color degrees of freedom in Yang-Mills theory, all the way down to the center of the bulk.

Topics & Concepts

Gauge theoryDuality (order theory)PhysicsScalar (mathematics)Degrees of freedom (physics and chemistry)Theoretical physicsContext (archaeology)Supersymmetric gauge theoryGeometryMathematical physicsMathematicsQuantum mechanicsPure mathematicsBiologyPaleontologyBlack Holes and Theoretical PhysicsCosmology and Gravitation TheoriesParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies
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