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A<sc>bstract</sc> We study the landscape of axion theories in compactifications of type IIB string theory on orientifolds of Calabi-Yau threefolds. In a sample of approximately 400,000 geometries we find that in the regime of perturbative control there are only a handful of distinct axion minima per geometry, despite there being infinitely many instanton contributions to the potential with unbounded charges. The ensemble we consider has numbers of axion fields ranging from 1 to 491, but the median number of distinct minima is 1, the mean number is 1.9 and the largest is 54. These small numbers of minima occur because the leading axion charge matrix is quite sparse, while the subleading corrections are increasingly exponentially suppressed as the charges increase. On their own, such potentials are nowhere near rich enough to be of interest anthropically. This is in stark contrast to potentials for which the charge matrix is less sparse or the hierarchies between the instanton contributions are less steep, where one can find$$ \mathcal{O}\left({10}^{500}\right) $$ minima for$$ \mathcal{O}(500) $$ axions. To generate a sufficiently large landscape from string compactifications our results indicate that one would need to rely on varying flux or topology, or to develop tools that allow one to go beyond the regime we can control with current techniques.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2026
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Nagele, Chris; Janssen, Oliver; Kleban, Matthew (, Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical)Abstract We study quantum decoherence numerically in a system consisting of a relativistic quantum field theory coupled to a measuring device that is itself coupled to an environment. The measuring device and environment are treated as quantum, non-relativistic particles. We solve the Schrödinger equation for the wave function of this tripartite system using exact diagonalization. Although computational limitations on the size of the Hilbert space prevent us from exploring the regime where the device and environment consist of a truly macroscopic number of degrees of freedom, we nevertheless see clear evidence of decoherence: after tracing out the environment, the density matrix describing the system and measuring device evolves quickly towards a matrix that is close to diagonal in a subspace of pointer states. We measure the speed with which decoherence spreads in the relativistic quantum field theory for a range of parameters. We find that it is less than the speed of light but faster than the speed of the massive charges in the initial state.more » « less
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Bachlechner, Thomas C.; Eckerle, Kate; Janssen, Oliver; Kleban, Matthew (, Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics)
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