* Ocaml in String Theory
@ 2005-01-03 12:13 Thomas Fischbacher
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From: Thomas Fischbacher @ 2005-01-03 12:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: caml-list
Ladies and Gentlemen,
a happy new year to all readers of this list.
For a non-mainstream language like Ocaml, it is evidently of great
importance to have good answers to the question about its practical
relevance. It seems as if we now have another nice application to add to
the list: in today's official arxiv.org listing, the following
preprint paper (by myself and two colleagues from the Albert Einstein
Institute) appeared:
http://www.arxiv.org/abs/hep-th/0412331
Physically speaking, one of the hot topics in string theory today is the
conjectured equivalence of certain quantum field theories which neither at
the classical level nor as quantum theories have an intrinsic length scale
on the one side - so-called conformal field theories - and string theory
on a space-time which approaches constant negative curvature at infinity
(i.e. anti deSitter space) - see e.g.
http://www.phys.lsu.edu/mog/mog18/node10.html
What we did was to provide further strong evidence that the physical key
property of integrability holds, however another important property known
as BMN scaling (sorry, I cannot go into details) is violated in
quite non-obvious ways.
Computationally, what we had to do in order to achieve this result was to
develop a fast algorithm which furthermore can be implemented close to the
machine level that allows us to sum literally billions of contributions
from different planar feynman graphs with four loops in them. Planarity is
the key property here that makes this calculation feasible - if we
included the non-planar graphs as well, we would have had to deal with an
estimated number of contributions of about half a quadrillion.
At the much simpler three loop level, our approach is faster than
previous ones (using the FORM program which was built explicitly for fast
quantum field theoretic calculations) by about a factor of 100. This comes
in part from our improved algorithm that singles out planar graphs (and
hence scales much better than algorithms which do not), in part from
doing term transformations not in an interpreted fashion, but
directly at machine code level (via compiled ocaml), furthermore from
carefully ensuring not to do unnecessary work when simplifying terms,
from evil hacks (such as abusing the FPU to do exact(!) fraction
arithmetics for fractions of the form <small numerator>/<small power of 2>),
and - quite important - from certain algorithmic tricks from the
functional programmer's toolbox such as continuation coding and lazy
evaluation. In other words, it would not at all have been possible
in anything else but a fast compiled functional language. Nevertheless,
we still had to burn 88 000+ CPU-hours on 2 GHz Athlon (and Opteron)
hardware to do the largest piece of the calculation and we are very
grateful towards our numerical colleagues for providing us with
appropriate resources - this is true symbolic supercomputing.
While we (the authors) are not yet sure about this, we think to have
strong reason to believe that this may be the (presumably by orders of
magnitude) largest symbolic algebra calculation performed so far -
counting the number of term transformations. (Excluding cypher breaking
and prime search attempts, as the underlying questions hardly can be
regarded as of symbolic nature.) We know that there have been quite large
four-loop QCD calculations before involving something like 50 000
individual graphs that furthermore had to deal with some transformations
on integrals (which we do not have, due to a certain kind of reduction we
perform in our model) and hence are somewhat more difficult to calculate
than our graphs - but certainly not by a factor of 100 000. If anyone
knows better and can tell us about an even larger symbolic calculation, we
would be glad to hear about it.
While our paper is essentially for physicists, it features a
self-contained appendix explaining the algorithmic and implementation
aspects of our work that should be readable especially for people with a
computer science background. Furthermore, one can download (details in the
paper) our source. Unfortunately, in order to actually build the program,
one needs a somewhat large development environment, as some of the ocaml
source and data files are machine generated by perl and CMU Common Lisp.
Admittedly, the code could be cleaner, but one should keep in mind here
a few external factors (i.e. pressure to publish new physical
results) which are different for computer scientists and physicists.
Well, it's not as bad as quite a lot of code in physics, and I
think I can show it around without having to pull a brown paper bag over
my head, but the style is certainly not one I'd like to see in textbooks.
Given the time (which I at present do not have), I'd like to clean it up
a bit more.
--
regards, tf@cip.physik.uni-muenchen.de (o_
Thomas Fischbacher - http://www.cip.physik.uni-muenchen.de/~tf //\
(lambda (n) ((lambda (p q r) (p p q r)) (lambda (g x y) V_/_
(if (= x 0) y (g g (- x 1) (* x y)))) n 1)) (Debian GNU)
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