Veneziano amplitude
In theoretical physics, the Veneziano amplitude refers to the discovery made in 1968 by Italian theoretical physicist Gabriele Veneziano that the Euler gamma 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.[1] Conformal symmetry was soon discovered. The formula is the following:
.
kn is a vector (such as a four-vector) referring to the momentum of the nth particle. Γ is the gamma function.
This discovery can be considered the birth of string theory,[2] as the discovery and invention of string theory came about as a search for a physical model which would give rise to such a scattering amplitude.
See also
External links
- String Theory and M-Theory, Lecture 6, Video lecture by Leonard Susskind on Veneziano amplitude. (Stanford University)
References
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