Non-lattice simulation of supersymmetric gauge theories as a probe to quantum black holes and strings
Jun Nishimura (KEK)

TL;DR
This paper discusses non-lattice simulation methods for supersymmetric gauge theories, confirming gauge-gravity duality and enabling studies of quantum black holes and strings with high accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces a non-lattice simulation approach for supersymmetric gauge theories, validating gauge-gravity duality and extending to 4d superconformal theories without fine-tuning.
Findings
Confirmed gauge-gravity duality with high accuracy
Simulated black hole thermodynamics from gauge theory
Extended to 4d superconformal field theories
Abstract
In the past decade we have witnessed remarkable developments in the gauge-gravity duality, which suggested a new approach to superstring theory and quantum space-time. In this context it is important to study supersymmetric large-N gauge theories in the strongly coupled regime. I will summarize the results and insights obtained so far by non-lattice simulations. A simple example of the gauge-gravity duality is the one between 1d U(N) gauge theory with 16 supercharges and the so-called black 0-brane solution in type IIA supergravity. In order for this duality to be valid, one has to take the 't Hooft large-N limit and to take the strong coupling limit on the gauge theory side. The gauge theory can be regularized by fixing the gauge completely thanks to one dimension, and by introducing a Fourier mode cutoff. One can then use the standard RHMC algorithm to simulate the system. The energy…
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