Update on the Amplituhedron

Awhile back I wrote a post on the Amplituhedron, a type of mathematical object  found by Nima Arkani-Hamed and Jaroslav Trnka that can be used to do calculations of scattering amplitudes in planar N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. (Scattering amplitudes are formulas used to calculate probabilities in particle physics, from the probability that an unstable particle will decay to the probability that a new particle could be produced by a collider.) Since then, they published two papers on the topic, the most recent of which came out the day before New Year’s Eve. These papers laid out the amplituhedron concept in some detail, and answered a few lingering questions. The latest paper focused on one particular formula, the probability that two particles bounce off each other. In discussing this case, the paper serves two purposes:

1. Demonstrating that Arkani-Hamed and Trnka did their homework.

2. Showing some advantages of the amplituhedron setup.

Let’s talk about them one at a time.

Doing their homework

There’s already a lot known about N=4 super Yang-Mills theory. In order to propose a new framework like the amplituhedron, Arkani-Hamed and Trnka need to show that the new framework can reproduce the old knowledge. Most of the paper is dedicated to doing just that. In several sections Arkani-Hamed and Trnka show that the amplituhedron reproduces known properties of the amplitude, like the behavior of its logarithm, its collinear limit (the situation when two momenta in the calculation become parallel), and, of course, unitarity.

What, you heard the amplituhedron “removes” unitarity? How did unitarity get back in here?

This is something that has confused several commenters, both here and on Ars Technica, so it bears some explanation.

Unitarity is the principle that enforces the laws of probability. In its simplest form, unitarity requires that all probabilities for all possible events add up to one. If this seems like a pretty basic and essential principle, it is! However, it and locality (the idea that there is no true “action at a distance”, that particles must meet to interact) can be problematic, causing paradoxes for some approaches to quantum gravity. Paradoxes like these inspired Arkani-Hamed to look for ways to calculate scattering amplitudes that don’t rely on locality and unitarity, and with the amplituhedron he succeeded.

However, just because the amplituhedron doesn’t rely on unitarity and locality, doesn’t mean it violates them. The amplituhedron, for all its novelty, still calculates quantities in N=4 super Yang-Mills. N=4 super Yang-Mills is well understood, it’s well-behaved and cuddly, and it obeys locality and unitarity.

This is why the amplituhedron is not nearly as exciting as a non-physicist might think. The amplituhedron, unlike most older methods, isn’t based on unitarity and locality. However, the final product still has to obey unitarity and locality, because it’s the same final product that others calculate through other means. So it’s not as if we’ve completely given up on basic principles of physics.

Not relying on unitarity and locality is valuable. For those who research scattering amplitudes, it has often been useful to try to “eliminate” one principle or another from our calculations. 20 years ago, avoiding Feynman diagrams was the key to finding dramatic simplifications. Now, many different approaches try to sidestep different principles. (For example, while the amplituhedron calculates an integrand and leaves a final integral to be done, I’m working on approaches that never employ an integrand.)

If we can avoid relying on some “basic” principle, that’s usually good evidence that the principle might be a consequence of something even more basic. By showing how unitarity can arise from the amplituhedron, Arkani-Hamed and Trnka have shown that a seemingly basic principle can come out of a theory that doesn’t impose it.

Advantages of the Amplituhedron

Not all of the paper compares to old results and principles, though. A few sections instead investigate novel territory, and in doing so show some of the advantages and disadvantages of the amplituhedron.

Last time I wrote on this topic, I was unclear on whether the amplituhedron was more efficient than existing methods. At this point, it appears that it is not. While the formula that the amplituhedron computes has been found by other methods up to seven loops, the amplituhedron itself can only get up to three loops or so in practical cases. (Loops are a way that calculations are classified in particle physics. More loops means a more complex calculation, and a more precise final result.)

The amplituhedron’s primary advantage is not in efficiency, but rather in the fact that its mathematical setup makes it straightforward to derive interesting properties for any number of loops desired. As Trnka occasionally puts it, the central accomplishment of the amplituhedron is to find “the question to which the amplitude is the answer”. By being able to phrase this “question” mathematically, one can be very general, which allows them to discover several properties that should hold no matter how complex the rest of the calculation becomes. It also has another implication: if this mathematical question has a complete mathematical answer, that answer could calculate the amplitude for any number of loops. So while the amplituhedron is not more efficient than other methods now, it has the potential to be dramatically more efficient if it can be fully understood.

All that said, it’s important to remember that the amplituhedron is still limited in scope. Currently, it applies to a particular theory, one that doesn’t (and isn’t meant to) describe the real world. It’s still too early to tell whether similar concepts can be defined for more realistic theories. If they can, though, it won’t depend on supersymmetry or string theory. One of the most powerful techniques for making predictions for the Large Hadron Collider, the technique of generalized unitarity, was first applied to N=4 super Yang-Mills. While the amplituhedron is limited now, I would not be surprised if it (and its competitors) give rise to practical techniques ten or twenty years down the line. It’s happened before, after all.

2 thoughts on “Update on the Amplituhedron

  1. Oneis Many

    this is an excellent post elucidating the nature of the amplituhedron. So it seems that it shows promise but in its current state it isn’t providing enhanced calculation power in the real world but It might be showing us something important which might open up an improved understanding of the universe. Thanks 🙂

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  2. Pingback: The Amplituhedron – Now In Poster Form! | Edward F Hughes

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