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Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

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Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry. Juan Maldacena Institute for Advanced Study. Based on http://arxiv.org/abs/ 1112.1016 & to appear by J. M. and A. Zhiboedov & to appear. . Elementary particles can have spin. Even massless particles can have spin. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry Juan Maldacena Institute for Advanced Study Based on http://arxiv.org/abs/ 1112.1016 & to appear by J. M. and A. Zhiboedov & to appear.
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Page 1: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Juan MaldacenaInstitute for Advanced Study

Based on http://arxiv.org/abs/1112.1016 & to appear by J. M. and A. Zhiboedov & to appear.

Page 2: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• Elementary particles can have spin.

• Even massless particles can have spin.

• Interactions of massless particles with spin are very highly constrained.

• Coleman Mandula theorem : The flat space S-matrix cannot have any extra spacetime symmetries beyond the (super)poincare group. Needs an S-matrix. Higher spin gauge symmetries become extra global symmetries of the S-matrix.

• Yes go: Vasiliev: Constructed interacting theories with massless higher spin fields in AdS4 .

Spin 1 = Yang Mills Spin 2 = Gravity Spin s>2 (higher spin) = No interacting theory in asymptotically flat space

Page 3: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• AdS4 dual to CFT3 • Massless fields with spin s ≥ 1 conserved

currents of spin s on the boundary. • Conjectured CFT3 dual: N free fields in the

singlet sector

• This corresponds to the massless spins fields in the bulk.

• 1/N = ħ = coupling of the bulk gravity theory. The bulk theory is not free.

Witten Sundborg Sezgin Sundell Polyakov – Klebanov Giombi Yin …

Page 4: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• What are the CFT’s with higher spin symmetry (with higher spin currents) ?

• We will answer this question here: • They are simply free field theories• This is the analog of the Coleman Mandula

theorem for CFT’s, which do not have an S-matrix.

• We will also constrain theories where the higher spin symmetry is “slightly broken”.

Page 5: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Why do we care ?• This is an interesting phase of gravity, or spacetime. • Any boundary CFT that has a weak coupling limit has a higher spin

conserved currents at zero coupling. • In examples, such as N=4 SYM, this is smoothly connected to the

phase where the higher spin fields are massive. Presumably by some sort of Higgs mechanism.

• In weakly coupled string theory, at high energies, we expect to have higher spin ``almost massless’’ fields. So it is interesting to understand the implications of this spontaneously broken symmetry.

• We will not address these more interesting questions here. We will just address the more restricted question posed in the previous slide.

Page 6: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• Vasiliev theory + boundary conditions that break the higher spin symmetry Dual to the large N Wilson Fischer fixed point…

• Two approaches to CFT’s : - Write Lagrangian and solve it in perturbation theory

- Bootstrap: Use the symmetries to constrain the answer. Works nicely when we have a lot of symmetry.

• We can also view this as constraining the asymptotic form of the no boundary wavefunction of the universe in AdS.

Polyakov – Klebanov Giombi Yin

Page 7: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Assumptions

• We have a CFT obeying all the usual assumptions: Locality, OPE, existence of the stress tensor with a finite two point function, etc.

• The theory is unitary• We have a conserved current of spin, s>2. • We are in d=3• (We have only one conserved current of spin 2.)

Page 8: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Conclusions

• There is an infinite number of higher spin currents, with even spin, appearing in the OPE of two stress tensors.

• All correlators of these currents have two possible forms:

• 1) Those of N free bosons in the singlet sector• 2) Those of N free fermions in the singlet sector

Page 9: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Outline

• Unitarity bounds, higher spin currents.• Simple argument for small dimension

operators• Outline of the full argument

• Then: cases with slightly broken higher spin symmetry.

Page 10: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Unitarity bounds

• Scalar operator: Δ ≥ ½ (in d=3)

Page 11: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Bounds for operators with spin• Operator with spin s . (Symmetric traceless

indices) • Bound: Twist = Δ -s ≥ 1 .• If Twist =1 , then the current is conserved

• We consider minus components only:

Spin s-1 , Twist =0

Page 12: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Removing operators in the twist gap

• Scalars with 1 > Δ ≥ ½• Assume we have a current of spin four. • The charge acting on the operator can only

give (same twist only scalars )

• Charge conservation on the four point function implies (in Fourier space)

Of course wealso have:

Page 13: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• This implies that the momenta are equal in pairs the four point function factorizes into a product of two point functions.

• We can now look at the OPE as 1 2 , and we see that the stress tensor can appear only if Δ=½ .

• So we have a free field !• Intuition: Transformation = momentum dependent

translation momenta need to be equal in pairs. Same reason we get the Coleman Mandula theorem !

Page 14: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• Observations: • We need to constrain both the correlators and

the action of the higher spin symmetry. Of course three point functions determine the action of the symmetry.

• We used twist conservation and unitarity to constrain the action of the generator.

• Then we used this to constrain the correlators.

Page 15: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Twist one

• Now we have:

• Sum over S’’ has finite range• Some c’s are non-zero , e.g.

Page 16: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Structure of three point functions

• Three point functions of three conserved currents are constrained to only three possible structures:

- Bosons - Fermions - Odd (involves the epsilon symbol).

- We have more than one because we have spin- The theory is not necessarily a superposition of free bosons and

free fermions (think of s=2 !)

Giombi, Prakash, YinCosta, Penedones, Poland, Rychkov

Page 17: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Brute Force method• Acting with the higher spin charge, and writing the most

general action of this higher spin charge we get a linear combination of the rough form

• The three point functions are constrained to three possible forms by conformal symmetry lead to a large number of equations that typically fix many of the relative coefficients of various terms.

• The equations separate into three sets, one for the bosons part, one for the fermion part and one for the odd part.

Coefficients in Transformation law

Page 18: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• In this way one constrains the transformation laws.

• Then one constrains the four point function.

• Same as in a theory with N bosons or fermions. One can also show that N is an integer.

Page 19: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Quantization of Ñ, or the coupling in Vasiliev’s theory

• We can show that the single remaining parameter, call it Ñ, is an integer.

• It is simpler for the free fermion theory• It has a twist two scalar operator

• Consider the two point function of

• If Ñ is not an integer some of these are negative. • So Ñ=N

Page 20: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• Thus, we have proven the conclusion of our statement. Proved the Klebanov-Polyakov conjecture (without ever saying what the Vasiliev theory is !).

• Generalizations: - More than one conserved spin two current expect the product of free theories (we did the case of two) - Higher dimension.

Conclusions

Page 21: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Almost conserved higher spin currents

• There are interesting theories where the conserved currents are conserved up to 1/N corrections.

• Vasiliev’s theory with bounday conditions that break the higher spin symmetry

• N fields coupled to an O(N) chern simons gauge field at level k.

• ‘t Hooft-like coupling Giombi, Minwalla, Prakash, Trivedi, Wadia, YinAharony, Gur-Ari, Yacoby

Page 22: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Fermions + Chern Simons• Spectrum of ``single trace’’ operators as in the

free case. • Violation of current conservation: (2pt fns set to 1 )

• Insert this into correlation functions

Breaks parity

Giombi, Minwalla, Prakash, Trivedi, Wadia, YinAharony, Gur-Ari, Yacoby

Page 23: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• Conclusion: All three point functions are

• Two parameter family of solutions

• We do not know the relation to the microscopic parameters N, k.

Page 24: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

• As we can rescale the operator and we get the large N limit of the Wilson Fischer fixed point.

• The operator becomes the operator which has dimension two (as opposed to the free field value of one). It also becomes parity even.

Page 25: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Discussion• In principle, it could be extended to higher point functions…

• It is interesting to consider theories which have other ``single trace” operators (twist 3) that can appear in the right hand side of the divergence of the currents. (e.g. Chern Simons plus adjoint fields).

• These are Vasiliev theories + matter. • What are the constraints on “matter’’ theory added to a system

with higher spin symmetry?. Conjecture : String theory-like. • Of course, this will be an alternative way of doing usual

perturbation theory. The advantage is that one deals only with gauge invariant quantities.

Future

Page 26: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

Conclusions

• Proved the analog of Coleman Mandula for CFT’s. Higher spin symmetry Free theories.

• Used it to constrain Vasiliev-like theories

• A similar method constrains theories with a higher spin symmetry violated at order 1/N.

Page 27: Constraining theories with higher spin symmetry

A final conjecture

• Assume that we have a theory in flat space with a weakly coupled S-matrix.

• The the theory contains massive higher spin fields , s > 2 .

• The tree level S-matrix does is well behaved at high energies.

• Then it should be a kind of string theory.


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