HirosiFest @ Kavli IPMU

Asia/Tokyo
Lecture Hall (Kavli IPMU, Kashiwa, Japan)

Lecture Hall

Kavli IPMU, Kashiwa, Japan

Kashiwa, Japan
Description

Dates:  October 20-21, 2022
Venue: Kavli IPMU Lecture Hall, Kashiwa Campus

Overview: Prof. Hirosi Ooguri is one of the founding members of the Kavli IPMU and is currently the director of Kavli IPMU. He has made tremendous contributions in physics and mathematics and is one of the most outstanding researchers of his generation. He is turning sixty this year, and we would like to take this opportunity to celebrate his remarkable contributions in physics and mathematics, bringing together experts worldwide.

This conference is followed by another event in celebration of Prof. Ooguri's 60th birthday: HirosiFest @ Caltech, October 27-28, 2022.

The conference is primarily in an "on-site/in-person" format, but we are thinking of making this event into a hybrid format, where online participation is also available. 

Due to Covid-related restrictions of UTokyo and Kavli IPMU, we need to restrict the number of on-site participants to up to ~60 people. (Note added on October 4th: the number was ~30 people before, but now we can accommodate many more people on-site. If you registered previously for online participation and want to change to on-site participation, please modify your registration in the registration page.)

Prof. Hirosi Ooguri

Invited speakers:

Koji Hashimoto (Kyoto) [canceled]
Hitoshi Murayama (UC Berkeley/Kavli IPMU)
Yu Nakayama (Rikkyo)
Yuji Okawa (Tokyo)
Takuya Okuda (Tokyo)
Eric Perlmutter (Saclay)
Sakura Schafer-Nameki (Oxford)
Ashoke Sen (ICTS)
Jaewon Song (KAIST)
Yuji Tachikawa (Kavli IPMU)
Tadashi Takayanagi (YITP, Kyoto)
Cumrun Vafa (Harvard)
Masahito Yamazaki (Kavli IPMU)

Session Chairs:

Simeon Hellerman (Kavli IPMU)
Takuya Okuda (Tokyo)
Jaewon Song (KAIST)
Yuji Tachikawa (Kavli IPMU)
Cumrun Vafa (Harvard)
Masahito Yamazaki (Kavli IPMU)

Organizing Committee:

Juan Maldacena (IAS)
David Simmons-Duffin (Caltech)
John H. Schwarz (Caltech)
Cumrun Vafa (Harvard)
Masahito Yamazaki (Kavli IPMU)

Address:
Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe (Kavli IPMU),
the University of Tokyo, 5-1-5 Kashiwa-no-ha, Kashiwa City, Chiba 277-8583, Japan


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Participants
  • Abhiram Kidambi
  • Akishi Kato
  • Alexander Kusenko
  • Alexey Bondal
  • Arpan Kundu
  • Arya Eyyappally Retheeshan
  • Ashoke Sen
  • Atsushi Horikoshi
  • Atsushi Katsuda
  • Brandon Rayhaun
  • Bruna Lorrany de Castro Araujo
  • Chen-Te Ma
  • CHRISTOS KOKORELIS
  • Clément Leloup
  • Cumrun Vafa
  • Daichi Ide
  • Dogancan Karabas
  • Dongmin Gang
  • Elisa Ferreira
  • Emily Nardoni
  • ERIC KOGGE KODE MELLE
  • Fuminori Okabayashi
  • Gabriele Di Ubaldo
  • Hajime Kobayashi
  • Hao Zhang
  • Haoyu Sun
  • Hidetoshi awata
  • Hiraku Nakajima
  • Hiroaki Kanno
  • Hiroki Matsui
  • Hiroki Takahashi
  • Hiromi Yokoyama
  • Hiroshi Naruse
  • Hitoshi Murayama
  • Hongfei Shu
  • Ippei Obata
  • Jaewon Song
  • Jeff Murugan
  • Jia Liu
  • Jiakang Bao
  • Jie-qiang Wu
  • Jingjing Shi
  • John Silverman
  • JOHNSON OLUWOLE ASHEFON
  • Junbao Wu
  • Justin Kaidi
  • Jyong-Hao Chen
  • JYOTIRMOY MUKHERJEE
  • Kai Martens
  • Kaiwen Sun
  • Kakeru Sugiura
  • Kanade Nishikawa
  • Kansei Inamura
  • Kantaro Ohmori
  • Kantaro Ohmori
  • Katsushi Ito
  • Kazumi Okuyama
  • Kazunobu Maruyoshi
  • Kazuya Yonekura
  • Kei-Ichi Kondo
  • Keisuke Konosu
  • Ken Kikuchi
  • Ken'ichi Nomoto
  • Kentaro Hori
  • Kenya Ikeda
  • Kevin Loo
  • Khai Bui
  • Khee-Gan Lee
  • Ki-Hong Lee
  • Ki-ichiro Sato
  • Koichi Nakagawa
  • Koji Hasegawa
  • Koji Hashimoto
  • Koji Ishiwata
  • Kotaro Kawasumi
  • Kwok Hei Matthew To
  • Makoto Natsuume
  • Makoto Sakurai
  • Mandy Cheung
  • Mark Vagins
  • Masa-Hiko Saito
  • Masafumi Shimada
  • Masahide Sato
  • Masahiro Takada
  • Masahito Yamazaki
  • Masaki Okada
  • Masaki Shigemori
  • Masaki Yamashita
  • Masashi Hamanaka
  • Masataka Watanabe
  • Mayuko Yamashita
  • Meer Ashwinkumar
  • Michelle Xu
  • Mikhail Kapranov
  • Minseok Cho
  • Misao Sasaki
  • Morimitsu Tanimoto
  • Mouhamadou Bamba KA
  • Myungbo Shim
  • Naoki Yamamoto
  • Naoyuki Tamura
  • Noah Arbesfeld
  • Nobuhito Maru
  • Philip Boyle Smith
  • Po-Shen Hsin
  • Pratik Nandy
  • Rajeev Singh
  • Rene Meyer
  • Renji Sakamoto
  • Rinto Kuramochi
  • Risshin Okabe
  • Ruidong Zhu
  • Ryo Suzuki
  • Saki Fujita
  • Sakura Schafer-Nameki
  • Sanefumi Moriyama
  • Satoru Odake
  • Satoshi Iso
  • Satoshi Yamaguchi
  • Sergey Ketov
  • Seung-Joo Lee
  • Shabeeb Alalawi
  • Shigeki Matsumoto
  • shigeo ohkubo
  • Shihwen Hor
  • Shin Nakamura
  • Shinsuke Nishigaki
  • shinya ishii
  • Shogo Aoyama
  • Shoichi Ichinose
  • Shoichi Kawamoto
  • Shono Shibuya
  • Simeon Hellerman
  • Sinya Aoki
  • Sohei Tsukahara
  • Sota Nakajima
  • Sotaro Sugishita
  • Tadahito Nakajima
  • Tadakatsu SAKAI
  • Tadashi Okazaki
  • Tadashi Takayanagi
  • Tadayuki Takahashi
  • Taizan Watari
  • Takahiro Kubota
  • Takanao Tsuyuki
  • Takeo Higuchi
  • Takeshi Chiba
  • Takeshi Morita
  • Takuya Okuda
  • Takuya Yoda
  • Tamiaki Yoneya
  • Teiji Kunihiro
  • Tetsutaro Higaki
  • Todor Milanov
  • Tokiro Numasawa
  • Tom Haruyama
  • Tom Melia
  • Tomotake Matsumura
  • Toshihiro Ota
  • Toshiya Namikawa
  • Tsukasa Tada
  • Tsunehide Kuroki
  • Valeri Vardanyan
  • Vicharit Yingcharoenrat
  • Vivek Saxena
  • Vladimir Dobrev
  • Volodymyr Takhistov
  • Wasif Ahmed
  • Weiguang Cao
  • Xinliang Lyu
  • Yas-Hiro Quano
  • Yasuhito Kaminaga
  • Yoshiaki Maeda
  • Yoshifumi Hyakutake
  • Yoshihiko Abe
  • Yoshihisa Kitazawa
  • Yu Miyauchi
  • Yu Nakayama
  • Yuchen Fu
  • Yue Nan
  • Yuji Ando
  • Yuji Okawa
  • Yuji Satoh
  • Yuji Shimizu
  • Yuji Sugawara
  • Yuji Sugimoto
  • Yuji Tachikawa
  • Yuji Terashima
  • Yukari Ito
  • Yukinobu Toda
  • Yunqin Zheng
  • Yuta Hamada
  • Yutaka Ookouchi
  • Yutaka Yoshida
  • Yuuji Tanaka
  • zhenbin yang
  • Zhihao Duan
  • Zijun Zhou
Contact
  • Thursday 20 October
    • 08:40
      Registration and covid test at reception
    • 1
      Cumrun Vafa (Harvard)

      [chair: Masahito Yamazaki (Kavli IPMU)]

      "Swampland and the Dark Sector"

    • 10:00
      Break
    • 2
      Hitoshi Murayama (UC Berkeley/Kavli IPMU)

      [chair: Masahito Yamazaki (Kavli IPMU)]

    • 11:10
      Break
    • 3
      Jaewon Song (KAIST)

      [chair: Yuji Tachikawa (Kavli IPMU)]

      "a vs c in the 4d SCFT landscape"

      The central charges of conformal field theories capture many interesting aspects of the dynamics. In this talk, I will discuss aspects of central charges in the landscape of 4d superconformal theories. We find that the scaling behavior of a and c for the large N limit of superconformal gauge theories (with simple gauge group) falls into two categories: O(N^2) and O(N). The O(N) theories exhibit a dense spectrum even in the BPS sector. We also find a large set of a=c SCFTs for a finite N, which poses an interesting question in view of holography. Some of these theories have a tantalizing connection to N=4 SYM theory and are also realizable in class S.

    • 12:30
      Photo
    • 12:35
      Lunch
    • 4
      Masahito Yamazaki (Kavli IPMU)

      [chair: Yuji Tachikawa (Kavli IPMU)]

    • 14:50
      Break
    • 5
      Yu Nakayama (Rikkyo)

      [chair: Takuya Okuda (Tokyo)]

      "(Topological) Twist and Scale vs Conformal invariance"

      (Topological) twisting a conformal field theory admits more deformations than its original theory. We argue that such deformations often lead to scale-invariant but non-conformal fixed points. One physical example is to allow spin-orbit interaction in the Heisenberg magnet, leading to scale-invariant but non-conformal Aharony-Fisher fixed point. We show similar examples in Euclidean M2-brane holography, where the self-dual field strength plays a prominent role.

    • 16:00
      Break
    • 6
      Ashoke Sen (ICTS)

      [chair: Takuya Okuda (Tokyo)]

  • Friday 21 October
    • 7
      Takuya Okuda (Tokyo)

      [chair: Jaewon Song (KAIST)]

      "Measurement-based quantum simulation of gauge theories"

      Numerical simulation of lattice gauge theories is an indispensable tool in high energy physics, and their quantum simulation is expected to become a major application of quantum computers in the future. In this talk, I show that sequential single-qubit measurements with the bases adapted according to the former measurement outcomes can induce a deterministic Hamiltonian quantum simulation of abelian lattice gauge theories. This is a specialization of the so-called measurement-based quantum computation, with a resource state tailored to simulate a lattice gauge theory. The resource state has a symmetry-protected topological order with respect to generalized global symmetries that are related to the symmetries of the simulated gauge theories on the boundary. If time permits I will sketch imaginary-time quantum simulation and the relation of the resource state with the classical partition function. This talk is based on a work in progress with Hiroki Sukeno.

    • 09:50
      Break
    • 8
      Tadashi Takayanagi (YITP, Kyoto)

      [chair: Jaewon Song (KAIST)]

      "CFT Dual of dS3 and Pseudo Entropy"

      We propose a holographic duality for gravity on a three-
      dimensional de Sitter space. This is essentially given by a k=-2 limit
      of SU(2) WZW model. We show that this proposal reproduces the expected
      free energy in de Sitter gravity. We also analyze the geodesic length in
      the three dimensional de Sitter spacetime and argue that it is
      interpreted as holographic pseudo entropy. We will also discuss a time-
      like entanglement entropy in AdS/CFT which shares a similar property in
      terms of pseudo entropy.

    • 11:00
      Break
    • 9
      Yuji Okawa (Tokyo)

      [chair: Simeon Hellerman (Kavli IPMU)]

      Correlation functions of scalar field theories from homotopy algebras

      When actions are written in terms of homotopy algebras such as A_infinity algebras and L_infinity algebras, expressions of on-shell scattering amplitudes in perturbation theory are universal for both string field theories and ordinary field theories. We thus expect that homotopy algebras can be useful in gaining insights into quantum aspects of string field theories from ordinary field theories. In addition to on-shell scattering amplitudes we find that correlation functions can also be described in terms of homotopy algebras, and in this talk we explain explicit expressions for correlation functions of scalar field theories using quantum A_infinity algebras presented in arXiv:2203.05366. Then we further discuss the application to the renormalization group.

    • 12:20
      Lunch
    • 10
      Yuji Tachikawa (Kavli IPMU)

      [chair: Simeon Hellerman (Kavli IPMU)]

      On heterotic 6-branes "without vector structure"

      Assuming that string theory has dynamical objects carrying all possible charges, there should be 6-branes in heterotic so(32) theory such that the gauge configuration on their radial direction S^2 is "without vector structure", i.e. is not an SO(32) gauge configuration. We discuss some of their curious features. This is a work in progress mainly with Kazuya Yonekura.

    • 14:40
      Break
    • 11
      Sakura Schafer-Nameki (Oxford)

      [chair: Cumrun Vafa (Harvard)]

      "On Symmetries."

      I will give a summary of some of the exciting recent developments on generalizations of symmetries in quantum field theories, most notably non-invertible or more generally categorical symmetries. For theories that have a string theoretic realization, I will discuss how these structures are implemented in this context and arise naturally e.g. in holographic or geometric realizations.

    • 16:00
      Break
    • 12
      Eric Perlmutter (Saclay)

      [chair: Cumrun Vafa (Harvard)]

      Features & Fantasies of Moduli Dependence in CFT