Abstract

We extend the perturbative double copy between radiating classical sources in gauge theory and gravity to the case of spinning particles. We construct, to linear order in spins, perturbative radiating solutions to the classical Yang-Mills equations sourced by a set of interacting color charges with chromomagnetic dipole spin couplings. Using a color-to-kinematics replacement rule proposed earlier by one of the authors, these solutions map onto radiation in a theory of interacting particles coupled to massless fields that include the graviton, a scalar (dilaton) $\phi$ and the Kalb-Ramond axion field $B_{\mu\nu}$. Consistency of the double copy imposes constraints on the parameters of the theory on both the gauge and gravity sides of the correspondence. In particular, the color charges carry a chromomagnetic interaction which, in $d=4$, corresponds to a gyromagnetic ratio equal to Dirac's value $g=2$. The color-to-kinematics map implies that on the gravity side, the bulk theory of the fields $(\phi,g_{\mu\nu},B_{\mu\nu})$ has interactions which match those of $d$-dimensional `string gravity,' as is the case both in the BCJ double copy of pure gauge theory scattering amplitudes and the KLT relations between the tree-level $S$-matrix elements of open and closed string theory.

Highlights

  • Almost one decade ago Bern, Carrasco, and Johansson (BCJ) discovered remarkable relations between perturbative amplitudes in gauge and gravity theories [1,2,3]

  • Given the relative simplicity of the gauge theory Feynman rules, the BCJ correspondence has made accessible the evaluation of high precision perturbative observables that would otherwise be intractable by direct calculation in gravity

  • We extend the classical double copy to include particle sources with spin

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Almost one decade ago Bern, Carrasco, and Johansson (BCJ) discovered remarkable relations between perturbative amplitudes in gauge and gravity theories [1,2,3]. This is precisely the action for “string gravity” at noncritical dimension d (in the classical limit, where the OðħÞ dilaton potential can be neglected) It matches the double copy of pure gluon amplitudes, which is suggestive of a relation at higher orders in perturbation theory between the classical color-to-kinematics rules proposed in [12] and BCJ duality of the S-matrix. Taken together with the bound state results in [13], the spin corrections studied in this paper and in [19] bring the classical double copy one step closer to making contact with astrophysically relevant [14] sources of gravitational radiation, a systematic procedure for projecting out the unwanted dilaton and axion modes remains to be fully developed To keep our discussion self-contained, we provide a review of the classical spinning particle formalism that we use in this paper in the Appendix

GLUON RADIATION FROM SPINNING COLOR CHARGES
DOUBLE COPY
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
The free spinning particle
Coupling to pure gravity
Dilaton gravity
Gauge interactions
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