Abstract
The tree-level scattering amplitudes for tr(ϕ3) theory can be interpreted as a sum over the vertices of a polytope known as the associahedron. For each graph G, there exists a natural generalisation of the associahedron, which is constructed by considering tubes and tubings of the underlying graph. This family of polytopes are called graph associahedra. The classical associahedra then arise as the graph associahedron for the path graphs. It is therefore natural to associate to each graph associahedron an amplitude-like object, we refer to as the amplitube, defined via a sum over its vertices. Recently, also in the context of tr(ϕ3) theory, progress has been made towards defining a new geometric object, coined the cosmohedron, which computes not the amplitude, but the cosmological wavefunction as a sum over its vertices. This polytope can be constructed by consistently blowing up all boundaries of the associahedron to co-dimension one. Building on these results, in the present paper, we generalise the notion of the wavefunction for arbitrary graphs. These new expressions, which we call cosmological amplitubes, are defined via a sum over the vertices of a corresponding polytope, the graph cosmohedron. The graph cosmohedra are constructed by considering regions and regional tubings of the underlying graph which we introduce. Like the cosmohedron, the graph cosmohedra can be obtained by consistently blowing up all boundaries of the corresponding graph associahedron to co-dimension one. This new family of polytopes constitutes a vast generalisation of the cosmohedron, and we provide explicit embeddings for them, which builds upon an ABHY-like embedding for the graph associahedra.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 74 |
| Number of pages | 23 |
| Journal | Journal of High Energy Physics (JHEP) |
| Volume | 2025 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| Early online date | 9 Sept 2025 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 9 Sept 2025 |
Keywords
- hep-th
- gr-qc
- math.CO
- Scattering Amplitudes
- Differential and Algebraic Geometry