- Source: Veneziano amplitude
In theoretical physics, the Veneziano amplitude refers to the discovery made in 1968 by Italian theoretical physicist Gabriele Veneziano that the Euler beta function, when interpreted as a scattering amplitude, has many of the features needed to explain the physical properties of strongly interacting mesons, such as symmetry and duality. Conformal symmetry was soon discovered. This discovery can be considered the birth of string theory, as the invention of string theory came about as a search for a physical model which would give rise to such a scattering amplitude. In particular, the amplitude appears as the four tachyon scattering amplitude in oriented open bosonic string theory. Using Mandelstam variables and the beta function
B
(
x
,
y
)
{\displaystyle B(x,y)}
, the amplitude is given by
S
(
k
1
,
k
2
,
k
3
,
k
4
)
=
2
i
g
o
2
α
′
(
2
π
)
26
δ
26
(
Σ
i
k
i
)
[
B
(
α
(
s
)
,
α
(
t
)
)
+
B
(
α
(
s
)
,
α
(
u
)
)
+
B
(
α
(
t
)
,
α
(
u
)
)
]
{\displaystyle S(k_{1},k_{2},k_{3},k_{4})={\frac {2ig_{o}^{2}}{\alpha '}}(2\pi )^{26}\delta ^{26}(\Sigma _{i}k_{i}){\big [}B(\alpha (s),\alpha (t))+B(\alpha (s),\alpha (u))+B(\alpha (t),\alpha (u)){\big ]}}
where
α
′
{\displaystyle \alpha '}
is the string constant,
k
i
{\displaystyle k_{i}}
are the tachyon four-vectors,
g
o
{\displaystyle g_{o}}
is the open string theory coupling constant, and
α
(
x
)
=
−
1
−
α
′
x
{\displaystyle \alpha (x)=-1-\alpha 'x}
.
See also
Beta function
Crossing (physics)
Dual resonance model
History of string theory
Regge theory
References
External links
String Theory and M-Theory, Lecture 6, Video lecture by Leonard Susskind on Veneziano amplitude. (Stanford University)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Veneziano amplitude
- Veneziano
- Gabriele Veneziano
- History of string theory
- Scattering amplitude
- Veneziano (surname)
- Dual resonance model
- P-adic quantum mechanics
- Yoichiro Nambu
- Simon Caron-Huot