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Random Surfaces and Quantum Gravity

  • Book
  • © 1991

Overview

Part of the book series: NATO Science Series B: (NSSB, volume 262)

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Table of contents (24 chapters)

  1. 2D Gravity and Non Perturbative Effects

  2. D = 1 Strings and String Field Theory

  3. D = 1 Strings and String Field Theory

Keywords

About this book

The Cargese Workshop Random Surfaces and Quantum Gravity was held from May 27 to June 2, 1990. Little was known about string theory in the non-perturbative regime before Oetober 1989 when non-perturbative equations for the string partition functions were found by using methods based on the random triangulations of surfaees. This set of methods pro­ vides a deseription of non-eritical string theory or equivalently of the coupling of matter fields to quantum gravity in two dimensions. The Cargese meeting was very successful in that it provided the first opportunity to gather most of the active workers in the field for a fuH week of lectures and extensive informal discussions about these exeiting new developments. The main results were reviewed, recent advances were explained, new results and conjectures (which appear for the first time in these proceedings) were presented and discussed. Among the most important topics discussed at the workshop were: The relation of KdV theory to loop equations and the Virasoro algebra, new results in Liouville field theory, effective (1 + 1) dimensional theory for 2 - D quantum gravity coupled to c = 1 matter and its fermionization, proposal for a new geometrical interpretation of the string equation and possible definition of quantum Riemann surfaces, discussion of the string equation for the multi-matrix models, links with topological field theories of gravity, issues in using target space supersymmetry to define good theories, definition of the partition function via analytic continuation, new models of random surfaces

Editors and Affiliations

  • University of California, Berkeley, USA

    Orlando Alvarez

  • Università di Roma II “Tor Vergata”, Rome, Italy

    Enzo Marinari

  • Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI), Paris, France

    Paul Windey

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