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    FEYNMAN MOTIVES

    by Matilde Marcolli (California Institute of Technology, USA)

    This book presents recent and ongoing research work aimed at understanding the mysterious relation between the computations of Feynman integrals in perturbative quantum field theory and the theory of motives of algebraic varieties and their periods. One of the main questions in the field is understanding when the residues of Feynman integrals in perturbative quantum field theory evaluate to periods of mixed Tate motives. The question originates from the occurrence of multiple zeta values in Feynman integrals calculations observed by Broadhurst and Kreimer.

    Two different approaches to the subject are described. The first, a “bottom-up” approach, constructs explicit algebraic varieties and periods from Feynman graphs and parametric Feynman integrals. This approach, which grew out of work of Bloch–Esnault–Kreimer and was more recently developed in joint work of Paolo Aluffi and the author, leads to algebro-geometric and motivic versions of the Feynman rules of quantum field theory and concentrates on explicit constructions of motives and classes in the Grothendieck ring of varieties associated to Feynman integrals. While the varieties obtained in this way can be arbitrarily complicated as motives, the part of the cohomology that is involved in the Feynman integral computation might still be of the special mixed Tate kind. A second, “top-down” approach to the problem, developed in the work of Alain Connes and the author, consists of comparing a Tannakian category constructed out of the data of renormalization of perturbative scalar field theories, obtained in the form of a Riemann–Hilbert correspondence, with Tannakian categories of mixed Tate motives. The book draws connections between these two approaches and gives an overview of other ongoing directions of research in the field, outlining the many connections of perturbative quantum field theory and renormalization to motives, singularity theory, Hodge structures, arithmetic geometry, supermanifolds, algebraic and non-commutative geometry.

    The text is aimed at researchers in mathematical physics, high energy physics, number theory and algebraic geometry. Partly based on lecture notes for a graduate course given by the author at Caltech in the fall of 2008, it can also be used by graduate students interested in working in this area.

     
    Contents:
    • Perturbative Quantum Field Theory and Feynman Diagrams
    • Motives and Periods
    • Feynman Integrals and Algebraic Varieties
    • Feynman Integrals and Gelfand–Leray Forms
    • Connes–Kreimer Theory in a Nutshell
    • The Riemann–Hilbert Correspondence
    • The Geometry of DimReg
    • Renormalization, Singularities, and Hodge Structures
    • Beyond Scalar Theories
     
    Readership: Graduate students and researchers in mathematical physics and theoretical physics.
     
    “This book can serve as an excellent guide for graduate students and researchers to this new area, in particular to the reasons of enigmatic reappearance of Euler's multiple zeta values as basic Feynman periods.”
    Yu I Manin
    Max-Planck-Institute for Mathematics, Bonn
     
    “Anyone interested in this rapidly expanding field will have to look through this monograph; for now, it is the only coherent source of information about the project, apart from reading scattered papers, written in different mathematical languages.”
    Gunther Cornelissen
    University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
     
    236pp    Pub. date: Dec 2009  
    ISBN:   978-981-4271-20-2
    981-4271-20-9
       US$48 / £36

     


    236pp    Pub. date: Dec 2009  
    ISBN:   978-981-4304-48-1(pbk)
    981-4304-48-4(pbk)
       US$24 / £18

     


     

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    Updated on 19 March 2010