Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes

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Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes. / Cristofoli, Andrea.

In: Journal of High Energy Physics (Online), Vol. 2020, No. 11, 160, 27.11.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cristofoli, A 2020, 'Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes', Journal of High Energy Physics (Online), vol. 2020, no. 11, 160. https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP11(2020)160

APA

Cristofoli, A. (2020). Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes. Journal of High Energy Physics (Online), 2020(11), [160]. https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP11(2020)160

Vancouver

Cristofoli A. Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes. Journal of High Energy Physics (Online). 2020 Nov 27;2020(11). 160. https://doi.org/10.1007/JHEP11(2020)160

Author

Cristofoli, Andrea. / Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes. In: Journal of High Energy Physics (Online). 2020 ; Vol. 2020, No. 11.

Bibtex

@article{ad499902cc3c4490b5ce7151277460bb,
title = "Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes",
abstract = "We study gravitational shock waves using scattering amplitude techniques. After first reviewing the derivation in General Relativity as an ultrarelativistic boost of a Schwarzschild solution, we provide an alternative derivation by exploiting a novel relation between scattering amplitudes and solutions to Einstein's field equations. We prove that gravitational shock waves arise from the classical part of a three point function with two massless scalars and a graviton. The region where radiation is localized has a distributional profile and it is now recovered in a natural way, thus bypassing the introduction of singular coordinate transformations as used in General Relativity. The computation is easily generalized to arbitrary dimensions and we show how the exactness of the classical solution follows from the absence of classical contributions at higher loops. A classical double copy between gravitational and electromagnetic shock waves is also provided and for a spinning source, using the exponential form of three point amplitudes, we infer a remarkable relation between gravitational shock waves and spinning ones, also known as gyratons. Using this property, we infer a family of exact solutions describing gravitational shock waves with spin. We then compute the phase shift of a particle in a background of shock waves finding agreement with an earlier computation by Amati, Ciafaloni and Veneziano for particles in the high energy limit. Applied to a gyraton, it provides a result for the scattering angle to all orders in spin.",
author = "Andrea Cristofoli",
year = "2020",
month = nov,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1007/JHEP11(2020)160",
language = "English",
volume = "2020",
journal = "Journal of High Energy Physics (Online)",
issn = "1126-6708",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Gravitational shock waves and scattering amplitudes

AU - Cristofoli, Andrea

PY - 2020/11/27

Y1 - 2020/11/27

N2 - We study gravitational shock waves using scattering amplitude techniques. After first reviewing the derivation in General Relativity as an ultrarelativistic boost of a Schwarzschild solution, we provide an alternative derivation by exploiting a novel relation between scattering amplitudes and solutions to Einstein's field equations. We prove that gravitational shock waves arise from the classical part of a three point function with two massless scalars and a graviton. The region where radiation is localized has a distributional profile and it is now recovered in a natural way, thus bypassing the introduction of singular coordinate transformations as used in General Relativity. The computation is easily generalized to arbitrary dimensions and we show how the exactness of the classical solution follows from the absence of classical contributions at higher loops. A classical double copy between gravitational and electromagnetic shock waves is also provided and for a spinning source, using the exponential form of three point amplitudes, we infer a remarkable relation between gravitational shock waves and spinning ones, also known as gyratons. Using this property, we infer a family of exact solutions describing gravitational shock waves with spin. We then compute the phase shift of a particle in a background of shock waves finding agreement with an earlier computation by Amati, Ciafaloni and Veneziano for particles in the high energy limit. Applied to a gyraton, it provides a result for the scattering angle to all orders in spin.

AB - We study gravitational shock waves using scattering amplitude techniques. After first reviewing the derivation in General Relativity as an ultrarelativistic boost of a Schwarzschild solution, we provide an alternative derivation by exploiting a novel relation between scattering amplitudes and solutions to Einstein's field equations. We prove that gravitational shock waves arise from the classical part of a three point function with two massless scalars and a graviton. The region where radiation is localized has a distributional profile and it is now recovered in a natural way, thus bypassing the introduction of singular coordinate transformations as used in General Relativity. The computation is easily generalized to arbitrary dimensions and we show how the exactness of the classical solution follows from the absence of classical contributions at higher loops. A classical double copy between gravitational and electromagnetic shock waves is also provided and for a spinning source, using the exponential form of three point amplitudes, we infer a remarkable relation between gravitational shock waves and spinning ones, also known as gyratons. Using this property, we infer a family of exact solutions describing gravitational shock waves with spin. We then compute the phase shift of a particle in a background of shock waves finding agreement with an earlier computation by Amati, Ciafaloni and Veneziano for particles in the high energy limit. Applied to a gyraton, it provides a result for the scattering angle to all orders in spin.

U2 - 10.1007/JHEP11(2020)160

DO - 10.1007/JHEP11(2020)160

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2020

JO - Journal of High Energy Physics (Online)

JF - Journal of High Energy Physics (Online)

SN - 1126-6708

IS - 11

M1 - 160

ER -

ID: 245893334