20–22 Apr 2026
Mainz Institute for Theoretical Physics, Johannes Gutenberg University
Europe/Berlin timezone

Titles and abstracts

Marco Baccianti (Tuesday, 16:00-16:30)

Title: One-Loop string amplitudes exactly in \alpha’

Abstract: String theory provides us with UV-finite amplitudes of quantum gravity at every
order in perturbation theory.
However, explicit computations become quickly very complicated, to the point that their
evaluation have been possible only in the low- and high- energy expansion. Essentially no
results are known at intermediate values of \alpha’.
In this talk, I will present a novel technique to evaluate one-loop amplitudes at finite
\alpha’, which also implements the i \epsilon prescription in string theory, and illustrate new
computational windows it opens.
Based on
https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.13827, https://arxiv.org/pdf/2507.22105 and https://
arxiv.org/pdf/2601.09707.
_______________________________________________________________________
Johannes Broedel (Monday, 9:15-10:15)

Title: Geometric, algebraic and analytic structures in scattering amplitudes
_______________________________________________________________________
Konstantin Baune (Monday,10:15-10:45)

Title: Single-valued polylogarithms for all genera

Abstract: Polylogarithms on Riemann surfaces of different genera have been proven
useful in many QFT and string amplitude calculations. Furthermore, the notion of singlevalued
functions without monodromies on the underlying surface can be of importance for
some of these computations.
In this talk, I will construct single-valued polylogarithms on Riemann surfaces of arbitrary
genus.
I will start by reviewing Brown’s construction of single-valued polylogarithms on the
punctured Riemann sphere and then generalize this formalism to define single-valued
elliptic and higher-genus polylogarithms.
This talk is based on joint work with Johannes Broedel and Yannis Moeckli.

_______________________________________________________________________

Iris Bree (Monday, 12:00-12:30)

Title: ε-Factorisation for Feynman Integrals in Higher Genus

Abstract: In this talk, we describe how a recently proposed systematic procedure for
obtaining ε-factorised differential equations for Feynman integrals can be applied beyond
the polylogarithmic setting. The method is developed independently of the underlying
geometry of the integral family. We illustrate how it works in practice in examples
associated with elliptic curves, and then show how the same strategy extends to
hyperelliptic cases of higher genus.

_______________________________________________________________________
Giacomo Brunello (Wednesday, 11:30-12:00)

Title: Pushing the Post-Newtonian Frontier: Six Loops and Beyond

Abstract: The detection of gravitational waves from coalescing binary systems requires increasingly accurate theoretical description of the gravitational dynamics. In the inspiral regime, the conservative dynamics can be described within an effective field theory framework,  where the two-body interactions are treated perturbatively in the post-Newtonian expansion and reformulated in terms of Feynman diagrams. 

One of the main challenges in determining higher-order corrections is the appearance of multi-loop

massless two-point Feynman integrals. 

In this talk, I will discuss recent developments leading to the determination of static gravitational interactions 

at sixth and seventh post-Newtonian order, where six- and seven-loop Feynman integrals arise. 

Multi-loop techniques for integral reduction and evaluation, including integration-by-parts identities 

and numerical methods, play a central role in obtaining these results. 

These developments pave the way toward the completion of the conservative dynamics at these orders and beyond.


_______________________________________________________________________
Seva Chestnov (Wednesday, 15:00-15:30)

Title: D-modules and singular expansions of Feynman integrals

Abstract: Linear differential operators play a prominent role in the study of Feynman
integrals and related special functions. In this talk, I will discuss two complementary
aspects of this framework. First, I will describe an algorithm for constructing differential
operators that annihilate Feynman integrals and for deriving the associated Pfaffian
systems of first-order linear differential equations. Second, I will explain how singular limits of Pfaffian systems can be studied systematically through restriction theory, leading to asymptotic expansions near singular limits. As an illustration, I will show how these ideas apply to the post-Newtonian expansion of gravitational waveforms.

_______________________________________________________________________
Claudia Fevola (Monday, 11:00-11:30)

TBA
_______________________________________________________________________
Gaia Fontana (Wednesday, 16:00-16:30)

Title: D-modules and integral reduction with CALICO

Abstract: We elaborate on the method of parametric annihilators for deriving relations
among integrals. Annihilators are differential operators that annihilate multi-valued
integration kernels appearing in suitable integral representations of special functions and
Feynman integrals. We describe a method for computing parametric annihilators based on efficient linear solvers and show how to use them to derive relations between a wide class of special functions. These include hypergeometric functions, Feynman integrals relevant to high-energy physics and duals of Feynman integrals. We finally present the public Mathematica package CALICO for computing parametric annihilators and its usage in several examples and modern applications.

_______________________________________________________________________
Hjalte Frellesvig (Tuesday, 11:00 – 11:30)

Title: Magic relations and critical varieties

Abstract: Feynman integrals are related through linear relations, often called Integration-
By-Parts relations, or IBPs for short.
Usually IBPs relate integrals in a generating sector, with integrals in its subsectors. It can,
however, happen that the integrals in the generating sector drop out, and the IBP relates
subsector integrals only, and that type of IBPs are known as magic relations. Magic
relations are of interest, since they cause problems for cut-based approaches to IBP
reduction, as well as to intersection theory in the framework of relative twisted
cohomology.
The main result of this presentation, and of the paper on which it is based, is the discovery that magic relations always come together with a generating sector that has a higher dimensional critical variety.
We also outline a proof of this result, discuss how to count master integrals in the
presence of higher dimensional critical varieties (using Morse-Bott theory), and discuss
how magic relations interact with symmetry relations.

____________________________________________________________________
Thomas Grimm (Wednesday, 16:30-17:30)

Title: Hidden Structures in Feynman Amplitudes: Complexity Theory and GKZ Reductions
_______________________________________________________________________
Carlo Heissenberg

Title: Waveforms at Infinity and at the Horizon

Abstract: The direct detection of gravitational waves has put the relativistic two-body
problem in the spotlight and stimulated progress in perturbative approaches that provide
analytic insight into its dynamics. Two strategies that have been witnessing interesting
developments to this end are the ones based on scattering amplitudes, which apply
to binary scatterings at large impact parameter, and on black-hole perturbation theory,
which applies to extreme-mass-ratio binaries. In this talk, I will discuss how these two
methods play complementary roles, and how they naturally feature differential equations
that determine the gravitational perturbations induced by scatterings of black holes both far 
away, at null infinity, and close to the event horizons. Such waveforms characterize in
particular the amounts of energy and angular momentum that are emitted and reabsorbed
by the system.

_______________________________________________________________________
Pyry Kuusela(Monday, 11:30-12:00)

Title: Feynman Integrals, Calabi-Yau Manifolds, and Abelian Curves

Abstract: In this talk, I first give a brief overview of the connection between Feynman
integrals and Calabi-Yau geometries. Then I present a novel construction of a family of
Abelian curves whose periods are associated to Feynman integrals. To find such curves,
we first use the connection between Feynman integrals and Calabi-Yau manifolds to
express the integrals in terms of Calabi-Yau periods. Natural candidates for Abelian curves encoding these periods are then given by intermediate Jacobians, which are well-studied tori that can be associated to any Calabi-Yau manifolds. The classical (Griffiths and Weil) Jacobians are either Abelian or vary holomorphically, but not both, and thus do not provide a simple relation between Feynman integrals and periods. This motivates us to construct a novel type of intermediate Jacobian with both of the desirable properties. The price one has to pay is that the Jacobian is not defined everywhere in the moduli space of the Calabi-Yau manifold. However, this restriction is very natural from the amplitudes perspective: the moduli of the Calabi-Yau manifold are already restricted by conditions such as that the masses appearing in the corresponding Feynman integrals are real.
This talk is based on joint work with Jockers, Kotlewski, McLeod, Pögel, Sarve, Wang, and Weinzierl.

_______________________________________________________________________
Sara Maggio (Tuesday, 12:00-12:30)

Title: Intersection theory and symmetry relations for Feynman integrals

Abstract: Intersection theory for twisted (co-)homology has become a powerful tool in the
study of Feynman integrals. First introduced as an alternative approach to integral
decomposition, it has since developed into a versatile framework with many applications.
In this talk, I will explain how twisted (co-)homology can be used to encode symmetry
relations among Feynman integrals. I will then show how this framework leads to a formula for the number of master integrals in the presence of symmetries.

_______________________________________________________________________
Chrysoula Markou (Tuesday, 14:15-15:00)

Title: An introduction to tree-level string scattering amplitudes

Abstract: In this short introductory lecture, we will review the rudiments of the calculation
of tree-level string scattering amplitudes by means of the generating functional method.
This entails first translating external states’ vertex operators into suitable differential
operators acting on exponential factors. Calculating then a given tree-level amplitude
amounts to acting on a “generalised” Koba-Nielsen factor with its external states’
differential operators and computing the resulting worldsheet integral.

_______________________________________________________________________
Eric Pichon-Paraboid (Monday, 15:00-15:30)

Title: Numerical computation of periods

Abstract: The period matrix of a smooth complex projective variety encodes the
isomorphism between its singular homology and its algebraic De Rham cohomology.
Numerical approximations with sufficient precision of the entries of the period matrix allow
to recover some algebraic invariants of the variety. Such approximations can be obtained
from an effective description of the homology of the variety, which itself can be obtained
from the monodromy representation associated to a generic fibration. I will describe
methods to compute periods to several hundreds digits of certified precision, and
showcase implementations and applications, in particular to computation of the Picard
rank of certain K3 surfaces appearing in Feynman integrals.

_______________________________________________________________________
Lecheng Ren (Tuesday, 15:00-15:30)

Title: Superstring amplitudes from the field-theory limit: an n-point map at one loop

Abstract: Are perturbative superstring amplitudes for massless external states just an $
\alpha'$ dressing of super-Yang-Mills/supergravity? This is the case at tree level, where
the worldsheet correlators at $n$ points can be written in a natural worldsheet basis, such
that the kinematic coefficients are BCJ numerators of super-Yang-Mills/supergravity
amplitudes, with the non-trivial $\alpha'$ dependence carried only by the Koba-Nielsen
factor. Motivated by this construction, we present for the first time a complete worldsheet
basis of one-loop superstring correlators at $n$ points. All the kinematic coefficients
associated to non-cusp basis elements are identified with pieces of one-loop BCJ
numerators of super-Yang-Mills/supergravity. This determines the superstring correlators
up to 15 points in terms of field theory. Starting at 16 points (modular weight 12), the
worldsheet basis may include cusp forms, which vanish in the field-theory degeneration,
such that the associated coefficients cannot be fixed in this manner. Therefore, the oneloop answer to our initial question is determined, at high multiplicity, by whether the
coefficients of cusp basis elements vanish or not. As a by-product of our construction, we
present new constraints on the field-theory limit that result from string modularity. These
are expressed as additional relations among one-loop BCJ numerators in maximal super-
Yang-Mills/supergravity starting at 6 points.

_______________________________________________________________________
Radu Roiban (Wednesday, 9:00-10:00)

Title: From Loops to Gravitational Waves: A Journey through the Integral Landscape

Abstract: The post-Minkowskian expansion of gravitational dynamics provides a rich arena in which quantum field theory and multi-loop integration techniques meet gravitational-wave physics. In this talk, I will survey some of the underpinnings of state-of-the-art calculations of both conservative dynamics and gravitational-wave emission. A central theme will be the mathematical structures and special functions that arise at various orders in Newton's constant. We will also discuss unexpected features, including nontrivial cancellations of special functions and the interplay between the amplitudes-based and multipolar-post-Minkowskian approaches to gravitational radiation.

_______________________________________________________________________
Benjamin Sauer (Monday, 16:00-16:30)

Title: Appearances of Calabi-Yau periods in classical gravitational observables

Abstract: Classical gravitational observables of a binary black hole system play a key role in gravitational waves physics and gravitational wave modeling. The new generation of gravitational waves detectors demand high precision calculations of these observables. It is remarkable that these calculations are also the first instance in which periods over
Calabi-Yau 3-folds contribute to an analytic result of a physical observable. I will discuss
the structure of the computation of the scattering angle and radiated energy up to fifth
Post-Minkowskian order (4-loop order) and in which way Calabi-Yau periods play a role in
the computation and analytic expression of these observables.

_______________________________________________________________________
Oliver Schlotterer (Tuesday, 9:15-10:15)

TBA
_______________________________________________________________________
Trevor Sheopner (Wednesday, 11:00-11:30)

Title: Magnusian Generating Function of Observables

Abstract: The exponential representation of the S-matrix behaves in a relatively simple
way under the classical limit, allowing a classical function on phase space we call the
``Magnusian’’ to appear and act as a generating function of all classical observables, thus
defining a ``classical S-matrix’’ through the exponentiated action of the Poisson bracket.
The Magnusian is naturally an in-in quantity, distinct from but related to the in-out on-shell
action, and is a generalization of a notion of the eikonal that has been gaining popularity in amplitudes literature. It is naturally computed by a diagrammatic ``Magnus series’’ with
well-understood iepsilons. This diagrammatic expansion naturally pre-incorporates all
physical implications of unitarity, so that perturbative results at a fixed order are exactly
unitary, rather than only being so up to higher order corrections. The Magnusian can be
defined even outside of a scattering context, and in a general setting it provides the
canonically-compatible way to time-average degrees of freedom within the Hamiltonian.

_______________________________________________________________________
Florian Seefeld (Tuesday, 11:30-12:00)

Title: The spectrum of Feynman integral geometries at two loops

Abstract: In this work, we provide a complete classification of the Feynman-integral
geometries at two-loop order in four-dimensional Quantum Field Theory with standard
quadratic propagators. We do this by considering a finite basis of integrals in the 't Hooft-
Veltman scheme and analysing the leading singularities of the integrals for generic
kinematic values through the loop-by-loop Baikov representation. Aside from the Riemann
sphere, we find elliptic curves, hyperelliptic curves of genus 2 and 3 as well as K3
surfaces, and in addition a smooth and non-degenerate Del Pezzo surface of degree 2,
resulting in a curve of geometric genus 3. These geometries determine the space of
functions relevant for Quantum Field Theories at two-loop order, including in the Standard
Model.

_______________________________________________________________________
Sid Smith (Tuesday, 10:15-10:45)

Title: Improving Intergration-by-parts
_______________________________________________________________________
Stephan Stieberger (Tuesday 16:30-17:30)
Title:
String Amplitudes and Twisted Co(homology)
_______________________________________________________________________
Kostiantyn Tolmachov (Wednesday, slot 14:15-15:00)

Title: Introduction to D-modules
Abstract:
Theory of D-modules is the (algebro-)geometric theory of linear partial
differential equations. Developed in the last quarter of the 20th century, it found many
(sometimes very unexpected) applications not only in the theory of differential equations,
but also in representation theory, algebraic geometry and algebraic topology. I will give a
very brief introduction to the theory of D-modules, with the view towards their use in the
study of Gelfand-Kapranov-Zelevinsky systems.

_______________________________________________________________________
Damian Van de Heisteeg (Monday, 14:15-15:00)

Title: Calabi-Yau periods in string compactifications and beyond

Abstract: In this review I discuss techniques for computing Calabi-Yau period integrals in compactifications of string theory. I highlight how these periods encode physical data in string compactifications and comment on possible applications to scattering amplitudes.

_______________________________________________________________________
Stefan Weinzierl (Monday, 16:30-17:30)

Title: New algorithms for Feynman integral reduction and epsilon-factorised differential
equations

Abstract: Precision calculations in quantum field theory rely very often on perturbation
theory and thus on the computation of Feynman integrals. Two of the basic algorithms are
integration-by-parts and the method of differential equations. In this talk I show how the
efficiency of these algorithms can be improved by taking geometric information of the
Feynman integrals into account. The method does not require any prior knowledge of the
geometry and merely amounts to counting poles and residues.

_______________________________________________________________________
Anna Wolz (Wednesday, 10:00-10:30)

Title: Analytic structure of the Black Hole S-matrix

Abstract: The analytic structure of the black hole S-matrix encodes information about the
response of a black hole to external perturbations and is required as input for S-matrix
bootstrap applications. In this talk, I will describe how to define an IR-finite S-matrix for the scattering of a classical wave off a Schwarzschild black hole background. To understand its analytic structure, I will first present a proof of analyticity, unitarity, and reflection symmetry for wave scattering off generic backgrounds, based on properties of the background potential. I will then apply this result to the Schwarzschild black hole, deriving regions of analyticity of the S-matrix and validating them with both perturbative results from black hole perturbation theory and examples in exactly solvable regimes. I will show that the reflection amplitude of the S-matrix has a branch cut in the upper-half frequency plane that is consistent with causality, analyticity, unitarity, and reflection symmetry.