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Title: The Milnor fibration of a hyperplane arrangement: from modular resonance to algebraic monodromy: MILNOR FIBRATIONS, MODULAR RESONANCE, AND ALGEBRAIC MONODROMY
NSF-PAR ID:
10034619
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  
Publisher / Repository:
DOI PREFIX: 10.1112
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society
Volume:
114
Issue:
6
ISSN:
0024-6115
Page Range / eLocation ID:
961 to 1004
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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  2. A bstract We study monodromy defects in O ( N ) symmetric scalar field theories in d dimensions. After a Weyl transformation, a monodromy defect may be described by placing the theory on S 1 × H d− 1 , where H d− 1 is the hyperbolic space, and imposing on the fundamental fields a twisted periodicity condition along S 1 . In this description, the codimension two defect lies at the boundary of H d− 1 . We first study the general monodromy defect in the free field theory, and then develop the large N expansion of the defect in the interacting theory, focusing for simplicity on the case of N complex fields with a one-parameter monodromy condition. We also use the ϵ -expansion in d = 4 − ϵ , providing a check on the large N approach. When the defect has spherical geometry, its expectation value is a meaningful quantity, and it may be obtained by computing the free energy of the twisted theory on S 1 × H d− 1 . It was conjectured that the logarithm of the defect expectation value, suitably multiplied by a dimension dependent sine factor, should decrease under a defect RG flow. We check this conjecture in our examples, both in the free and interacting case, by considering a defect RG flow that corresponds to imposing alternate boundary conditions on one of the low-lying Kaluza-Klein modes on H d− 1 . We also show that, adapting standard techniques from the AdS/CFT literature, the S 1 × H d− 1 setup is well suited to the calculation of the defect CFT data, and we discuss various examples, including one-point functions of bulk operators, scaling dimensions of defect operators, and four-point functions of operator insertions on the defect. 
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