Thursday, August 2 |
07:00 - 08:50 |
Breakfast (Vistas Dining Room) |
08:50 - 09:45 |
Christopher Fewster: Measurement schemes for quantum field theory in curved spacetimes ↓ (Joint work with R.Verch)
Algebraic quantum field theory is founded on the idea of algebras of observables associated
with local regions of spacetime. However, not much attention has been given to how these observables
can actually be measured. On the other hand, quantum measurement theory provides an operational
understanding of measurement schemes, in which a probe system is used to measure a quantum
observable of the system of interest. However these discussions are not usually framed in a spacetime
context. This talk will describe a generally covariant formalism of measurement schemes adapted to
quantum field theory in curved spacetimes, illustrated by a specific model that can be analysed in
detail. (TCPL 201) |
09:45 - 10:15 |
Kasia Rejzner: BV quantization in perturbative algebraic quantum field theory: gauge theories and effective quantum gravity ↓ I will give an overview of how the Batalin-Vilkovisky (BV) formalism can be incorporated
into perturbative algebraic quantum field theory in full generality and I will discuss two examples:
gauge theories and effective quantum gravity. In the latter case, there is an additional difficulty in
constructing gauge-invariant observables. I will explain how this is addressed in our approach. (TCPL 201) |
10:15 - 10:45 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
10:45 - 11:40 |
Michał Wrochna: Propagators and distinguished states on curved spacetimes ↓ (Joint work with Ch. Gerard)
In QFT on curved spacetimes, a central difficulty is how to reconcile local properties of states (short-distance behaviour of N-point functions) with global ones (positivity, spacetime or gauge
symmetries, asymptotic convergence to vacuum or thermal state, boundary conditions, etc.). In the last
few years, these difficulties have been overcome in a wide range of situations, leading in
particular to rigorous descriptions of thermal effects on black hole spacetimes. The aim of the talk will
be to present the new state-of-the-art and discuss the main conjectures, with a particular focus on:
- distinguished states on black hole spacetimes and their thermal properties
- Hadamard states and (generalized) Feynman propagators in scattering situations
- the Reeh-Schlieder property
- states with good holographic properties on AdS spacetimes (TCPL 201) |
11:40 - 13:30 |
Lunch (Vistas Dining Room) |
13:30 - 14:25 |
Nicola Pinamonti: Thermal states in perturbative algebraic quantum field theory: stability, relative entropy and entropy production ↓ We analyze some properties shown by extremal KMS states for interacting massive scalar
fields propagating over Minkowski spacetime. These states have been recently constructed in the
framework of perturbative algebraic quantum field theories by Fredenhagen and Lindner. In particular,
we discuss the validity of the return to equilibrium property when the interaction Lagrangian has
compact spatial support. If the adiabatic limit is considered, the return to equilibrium is in general not
valid. This implies that an equilibrium state under the adiabatic limit for a perturbative interacting
theory evolved with the free dynamics does not converge to the free equilibrium state. Actually, we
show that the ergodic mean of this state converges to a non-equilibrium steady state (NESS) for the free
theory. We thus compute the relative entropy among equilibrium states for different evolutions showing
that such an extent is compatible with perturbation theory. We then analyze the entropy production in
the NESS discussed above to estimate how far from equilibrium is this state. (TCPL 201) |
14:25 - 14:55 |
Paweł Duch: Infrared problem and adiabatic limit in perturbative quantum field theory ↓ I will discuss different types of the adiabatic limit in perturbative quantum field theory in the
Minkowski space in the Epstein-Glaser approach: the algebraic adiabatic limit, the weak adiabatic limit
and the strong adiabatic limit.
(1) The algebraic adiabatic limit is the construction of the net of local algebras of interacting fields and
interacting observables. This construction is well-understood even in the case of models with gauge
symmetries and is applicable also to theories defined on curved spacetime.
(2) The weak adiabatic limit allows to construct the Wightman and Green functions. I will present the
recent results about its existence in most physically relevant models of quantum field theory and show
that these results can be used to define a Poincaré-invariant state on the algebra of interacting
fields in the algebraic adiabatic limit. The state obtained in this way can be interpreted as an interacting
vacuum state.
(3) The strong adiabatic limit is used to define the scattering matrix and the interacting fields as
operators acting on a Hilbert space. This limit is under control only in the case of purely massive
models. Because of the infrared problem it does not exist in most models with massless particles.
The notable example is quantum electrodynamics for which even the first order correction to the
scattering matrix is ill-defined. Based on the ideas of Dollard, Kulish and Faddeev, I will propose a
definition of a modified scattering matrix and modified interacting fields in a model with the infrared
problem and show the existence of the strong adiabatic limit in the modified sense in low orders of
perturbation theory. (TCPL 201) |
14:55 - 15:25 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
15:25 - 15:55 |
Joseph C. Várilly: Wigner's "continuous-spin" representations reconsidered ↓ Starting with proposals by Schuster and Toro (2013), the massless "continuous-spin" or
"infinite-helicity" irreducible representations of the Poincaré group have been the subject of
several recent investigations. Their status as string-localizable particles was shown in principle by
Mund, Schroer and Yngvason (2006). From the viewpoint of Wigner's equations of motion for such (as
yet unobserved) particles, we endeavour to give a first-quantized approach to them, based on a
background of classical elementary systems. (TCPL 201) |
17:45 - 19:45 |
Dinner (Vistas Dining Room) |
19:45 - 20:15 |
Henning Bostelmann (adhoc talk): "Backflow: A tale of potentials in quantum mechanics with potential for public impact" ↓ One of the unintuitive features of quantum mechanics is "quantum
backflow": Particles can, in certain circumstances, move in the
direction opposite to their momentum. More technically, for a
one-dimensional particle with positive momentum, the (averaged)
probability flux operator may have negative expectation values, although
to a limited amount. This effect has been known for quite some time for
free particles. We recently verified that the effect is stable under
interaction in the sense of scattering theory: particles with
*asymptotically* positive momentum can exhibit a limited amount of
negative probability flux in the interaction region. This mathematical
result, somewhat unexpectedly for us, resulted in a brief flurry of
coverage in the international press. (TCPL 201) |