Volume 237

iTHEMS Weekly News Letter

Seminar Report

Early Universe Mini-workshop was held on Jan. 31 - Feb. 2, 2023

2023-02-06

We held Early Universe Mini-workshop at SUURI-COOL (Kobe) on Jan. 31 - Feb. 2, 2023. The aim of the workshop was to gather researchers in cosmology and neighboring areas, from students to professors, and discuss future directions towards the understanding of the early Universe and related fundamental issues. In order to stimulate in-depth discussions and future collaborations, we organized the workshop in the way that the participants have ample time to interact with each other. Total 22 people attended the workshop on site, as well as over 30 people registered for online participation. The backgrounds of the participants were diverse in terms of nationality, gender and expertise. The topics of the talks at the workshop also range wide, albeit all on the early Universe cosmology in a broad sense, from observational aspects to formal ones.

Reported by Ryo Namba

Upcoming Events

Workshop

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Kyoto Univ. MACS Program x RIKEN iTHEMS Collaborative Research Forum

February 13 (Mon) at 13:00 - 18:00, 2023

RIKEN iTHEMS and the SACRA Interdisciplinary Research Division of the Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University signed a joint research agreement on the task "Creation of new fields and solution of various problems in science using mathematical-based interdisciplinary methods", which started in 2018, and the two institutions have been strengthening collaboration over the past five years. During this period, various collaborative activities in both research and education have been carried out and results have been achieved, including the holding of research symposia, joint lectures across universities, the establishment of visiting lectures, and educational activities in the MACS Study Group. At this forum, we would like to present the results of these five years of joint research and to link them to the start of further collaboration in the future. In particular, many undergraduate and graduate students have participated in the "MACS Study Group 2022-SG5 Pipeline Connecting RIKEN and MACS", and have been actively engaged in research activities with RIKEN researchers. The results of these SG5 activities will be presented by the students.

Venue: 4F, South Tower, School of Science Bldg. No.6, Kyoto University / via Zoom

Event Official Language: Japanese

Seminar

iTHEMS Math Seminar

Quantum groups and cohomology theories

February 15 (Wed) at 14:00 - 16:00, 2023

Yaping Yang (Senior Lecturer, University of Melbourne, Australia)

In the first half of my talk, I will review quantum groups at roots of unity and their representation theory. In the second half, I will explain a construction of new quantum groups using cohomology theories from topology. The construction uses the so-called cohomological Hall algebra associated to a quiver and an oriented cohomology theory. In examples, we obtain the Yangian, quantum loop algebra and elliptic quantum group, when the cohomology theories are the cohomology, K-theory, and elliptic cohomology respectively.

Venue: Hybrid Format (Common Room 246-248 and Zoom)

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Math Seminar

Coherent sheaves, quivers, and quantum groups

February 17 (Fri) at 14:00 - 16:00, 2023

Gufang Zhao (Senior Lecturer, University of Melbourne, Australia)

This talk aims to illustrate symmetries in geometry. The first half surveys a few examples of parametrizing coherent sheaves on a variety and how quantum groups control the symmetry of parametrization space. The second half aims to illustrate some special cases when the variety is a local toric 3-Calabi-Yau.

Venue: Hybrid Format (Common Room 246-248 and Zoom)

Event Official Language: English

Special Lecture

The Electron-Ion Collider: the Ultimate Electron Microscope

February 20 (Mon) at 15:00 - 16:30, 2023

Gordon Baym (Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois, USA)

How does the nucleon get its mass? Certainly not from the Higgs -- the rest masses of the quarks it contains add up to only one percent of the nucleon mass. Rather the remaining 99% comes from the zero-point energy of the quarks, antiquarks and gluons localized in the nucleon. How do nuclei differ from being a simple collection of nucleons? How are the gluons, for example, distributed in nuclei? Do they stick out, or are they clumped towards the center of the nucleon? Gluons, like dark matter unseen but playing the crucial role in gluing matter together, are strongly interacting. Do such gluons form new emergent quantum states in nuclei, as in condensed matter physics? And how is the spin of the proton -- the key to NMR imaging -- put together from the spin and orbital motion of the quarks and gluons in the proton?

Answering these basic questions about the constituents of the matter of our everyday world, and related questions about dense nuclear matter, will, as I will discuss, be the scientific focus of the forthcoming Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), a major accelerator that will collide beams of electrons with beams of protons or heavier ions to study the internal workings of nucleons and nuclei.*  The EIC, to be built at Brookhaven National Laboratory, will be world's most powerful electron microscope, with a luminosity comparable to the LHC, with highly polarized electron and proton beams and a center-of-mass energy of some 100 GeV;  its science will be a striking culmination of the study of nuclei by electron scattering begun in the 1950's. 

The accelerator challenges in building the EIC, which I will briefly touch on, are formidable.   The EIC is the only major United States accelerator project in the foreseeable future; its development will preserve and develop capabilities in accelerator technology, for nuclear, material, biological, and chemical sciences, and applied areas, not to mention possible future large-scale accelerator projects in high energy physics.

*To read about the EIC in advance, see the National Research Council/ National Academy of Sciences report, An Assessment of U.S.-Based Electron-Ion Collider Science, which can be freely downloaded from the first URL below, as well as the EIC Users Group White Paper (Nov. 2022) available from the second URL below.

Venue: Okochi Hall, 1F Laser Science Laboratory, RIKEN / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

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iTHEMS Theoretical Physics Seminar

Spectral correlations and scrambling dynamics in Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev type models

May 30 (Tue) at 13:30 - 15:00, 2023

Masaki Tezuka (Assistant Professor, Division of Physics and Astronomy, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University)

Note: Due to unexpected trouble, we have made the decision to postpone the seminar scheduled for February 21 to May 30. Sorry for the trouble.

Abstract:
The Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev (SYK) model, proposed in 2015, is a quantum mechanical model of N Majorana or complex fermions with all-to-all random four-body interactions. The model has attracted significant attention over the years due to its features such as the existence of the large-N solution with maximally chaotic behavior at low temperatures and holographic correspondence to low-dimensional gravity.
The sparse version of the SYK model reproduces essential features of the original model for reduced numbers of disorder parameters. We recently proposed [1] a further simplification, where we set the nonzero couplings to be +1 or -1 rather than sampling from a continuous distribution such as Gaussian. This binary-coupling model exhibits strong correlations in the spectrum, as observed in the spectral form factor, more efficiently in terms of the number of nonzero terms than in the Gaussian distribution case. We also discuss the scrambling dynamics with the binary-coupling sparse SYK model, comparing the model with the original model as well as the SYK model with random two-body terms [2], where the localization of the many-body eigenstates in the Fock space has been quantitatively studied [3,4].

References

  1. Masaki Tezuka, Onur Oktay, Enrico Rinaldi, Masanori Hanada, and Franco Nori, Binary-coupling sparse Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model: An improved model of quantum chaos and holography, Phys. Rev. B 107, L081103 (2023), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevB.107.L081103, arXiv: 2208.12098
  2. Antonio M. García-García, Bruno Loureiro, Aurelio Romero-Bermúdez, and Masaki Tezuka, Chaotic-Integrable Transition in the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev Model, Phys. Rev. Lett. 120, 241603 (2018), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.241603
  3. Felipe Monteiro, Tobias Micklitz, Masaki Tezuka, and Alexander Altland, Minimal model of many-body localization, Phys. Rev. Research 3, 013023 (2021), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.3.013023
  4. Felipe Monteiro, Masaki Tezuka, Alexander Altland, David A. Huse, and Tobias Micklitz, Quantum Ergodicity in the Many-Body Localization Problem, Phys. Rev. Lett. 127, 030601 (2021), doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.030601, arXiv: 2012.07884

Venue: Hybrid Format (3F #359 and Zoom), Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

iTHEMS Seminar

Algebra of symmetry in BF-like models in 3d and 4d

February 22 (Wed) at 14:00 - 15:30, 2023

Christophe Goeller (Humboldt Fellow, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany)

In this talk, I will discuss the construction of the boundary symmetry algebra for BF-like theories in 3D and 4D. In the 3D case, the theory corresponds to (an extension of) 3D gravity allowing for a source of curvature and torsion. I will show how the study of the current algebra and its associated Sugawara construction allows for two notions of quadratic charges (the usual diffeomorphism and its "dual") independently of boundary conditions. I will discuss their resulting algebra and its relation with the usual construction of the asymptotic boundary algebra. In the 4D case, a similar yet fundamentally different construction is possible, similarly resulting in multiple quadratic charges. I will discuss their constructions and their possible relations to 4D gravity.

Venue: Hybrid Format (Common Room 246-248 and Zoom)

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

NEW WG Seminar

How to sit Maxwell and Higgs on the boundary of AdS

February 28 (Tue) at 13:30 - 15:00, 2023

Matteo Baggioli (Associate Professor, School of Physics and Astronomy, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China)

Within the holographic correspondence, boundary conditions play a fundamental role in determining the nature of the dual field theory. In this talk, I will show how to exploit mixed boundary conditions to obtain dynamical electromagnetism in the boundary theory. This is necessary to apply AdS-CFT to many real-world applications, e.g., magnetohydrodynamics, plasma physics, superconductors, etc. where dynamical gauge fields and Coulomb interactions are fundamental. As a proof of concept, I will show two emblematic cases. First, I will prove that the results from the 4-dimensional Einstein-Maxwell bulk theory with these deformed boundary conditions are in perfect agreement with relativistic magneto-hydrodynamics in 2+1 dimensions. Second, I will discuss the collective excitations of a bona-fide holographic superconductor and prove the existence of the Anderson-Higgs mechanism therein.

Venue: Room 6209, Korakuen Campus, Chuo University / via Zoom

Event Official Language: English

Seminar

ABBL-iTHEMS Joint Astro Seminar

Cosmic magnetism and its effects on the observed properties of ultra high-energy cosmic rays

March 10 (Fri) at 14:00 - 15:00, 2023

Ellis Owen (JSPS International Research Fellow, Theoretical Astrophysics Group, Department of Earth and Space Science, Graduate School of Science, Osaka University)

Ultra high-energy (UHE) cosmic rays (CRs) from distant sources interact with intergalactic radiation fields, leading to their spallation and attenuation through photo-hadronic processes. Their deflection and diffusion in large scale intergalactic magnetic fields (IGMFs), in particular those associated with Mpc-scale structures, alter the cumulative cooling and interactions of a CR ensemble to modify their spectral shape and composition observed on Earth. In this talk, I will demonstrate the extent to which IGMFs can affect observed UHE CRs, and show that source population models are degenerate with IGMF properties. Interpretation of observations, including the endorsement or rejection of any particular UHE CR source classes, needs careful consideration of the structural properties and evolution of IGMFs. Future observations providing tighter constraints on IGMF properties will significantly improve confidence in assessing UHE CR sources and their intrinsic CR production properties.

Venue: via Zoom / Common Room #246-248, 2F Main Research Building, RIKEN

Event Official Language: English

Workshop

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Supported by iTHEMS

6th Workshop on Virus Dynamics

July 4 (Tue) - 6 (Thu), 2023

Catherine Beauchemin (Deputy Program Director, iTHEMS)
Shingo Iwami (Professor, Graduate School of Science, Nagoya University)

The Workshop on Virus Dynamics is an international meeting held every 2 years. It brings virologists, immunologists, and microbiologists together with mathematical and computational modellers, bioinformaticians, bioengineers, virophysicists, and systems biologists to discuss current approaches and challenges in modelling and analyzing different aspects of virus and immune system dynamics, and associated vaccines and therapeutics. This 6th version of the workshop builds on the success of previous ones held in Frankfurt (2013), Toronto (2015), Heidelberg (2017), Paris (2019) and virtually (2021). It is supported by the Interdisciplinary Theoretical and Mathematical Sciences (iTHEMS) program at RIKEN, by Nagoya University, and by the Japan Science and Technology Agency. Up-to-date information and registration is available via the website. The workshop is for in-person participation only (no virtual or hybrid option).

Venue: Noyori Conference Hall, Higashiyama Campus, Nagoya University

Event Official Language: English

Person of the Week

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Self-introduction: Christian Quirouette

2023-02-07

Hi, my name is Christian Quirouette. I am a postdoctoral fellow at Toronto Metropolitan University in Canada. My field of research is virophyiscs, i.e. applying methods of physics to problems in virology. My research primarily focuses on stochastic mathematical modelling of viral infections. I’m excited to be working here at iTHEMS and have the chance to discuss and possibly collaborate with other researchers in other fields.

Paper of the Week

Week 2, February 2023

2023-02-09

Title: Brueckner $G$-matrix approach to two-dimensional Fermi gases with the finite-range attractive interaction
Author: Hikaru Sakakibara, Hiroyuki Tajima, Haozhao Liang
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2302.03446v1

Title: Nuclear response to dark matter signals in Ge and Xe odd-mass targets
Author: M. M. Saez, O. Civitarese, T. Tarutina, K. Fushimi
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2302.00879v1

Title: Robust Perfect Adaptation of Reaction Fluxes Ensured by Network Topology
Author: Yuji Hirono, Hyukpyo Hong, Jae Kyoung Kim
arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/2302.01270v1

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