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Published October 15, 2023 | Published
Journal Article Open

Bespoke dual resonance

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Dual resonance is one of the great miracles of string theory. At a fundamental level, it implies that the particles exchanged in different channels are subtly equivalent. Furthermore, it is inextricably linked to the property of exceptionally tame high-energy behavior. In this paper, we present explicit, closed-form expressions for a new class of dual resonant amplitudes describing an infinite tower of spins for an arbitrary mass spectrum. In particular, the input of our construction is a user-defined, fully customizable choice of masses. The resulting "bespoke" amplitudes are well behaved in the ultraviolet and analytic except at simple poles whose residues are polynomial in the momentum transfer, in accordance with locality. The absence of branch cuts can be seen using Newton's identities, but can also be made manifest by expressing the amplitudes as a simple d log integral of the Veneziano amplitude that remaps the linear Regge trajectories of the string to a tunable spectrum. We identify open regions of parameter space that firmly deviate from string theory but nevertheless comport with partial wave unitarity. Last but not least, we generalize our construction to the scattering of any number of particles in terms of a d log transform of the Koba-Nielsen worldsheet integral formula.

Copyright and License

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article's title, journal citation, and DOI. 

Funded by SCOAP3.

Acknowledgement

We thank Nathaniel Craig, Nick Geiser, David Gross, Aaron Hillman, Igor Klebanov, Piotr Tourkine, and Sasha Zhiboedov for comments. C. C. is supported by the Department of Energy (Grant No. DE-SC0011632) and by the Walter Burke Institute for Theoretical Physics. G. N. R. is supported by the James Arthur Postdoctoral Fellowship at New York University, and was supported at the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics by the Simons Foundation (Grant No. 216179), the National Science Foundation (Grant No. NSF PHY-1748958), and at the University of California, Santa Barbara by the Fundamental Physics Fellowship.

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Additional details

Created:
October 16, 2023
Modified:
October 16, 2023