62 research outputs found
The nature of the finite temperature QCD transition as a function of the quark masses
The finite temperature QCD transition for physical quark masses is a
crossover. For smaller quark masses a first-order phase transition is expected.
Using Symanzik improved gauge and stout improved fermion action for 2+1 flavour
staggered QCD we give estimates/bounds for the phase line separating the
first-order region from the crossover one. The calculations are carried out on
two different lattice spacings. Our conclusion for the critical mass is for and for lattices.Comment: Talk presented at the XXV International Symposium on Lattice Field
Theory, July 30 - August 4 2007, Regensburg, Germany. 7 pages, 6 figure
The equation of state at high temperatures from lattice QCD
We present results for the equation of state upto previously unreachable,
high temperatures. Since the temperature range is quite large, a comparison
with perturbation theory can be done directly.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, Lattice 200
Lattice SU(3) thermodynamics and the onset of perturbative behaviour
We present the equation of state (pressure, trace anomaly, energy density and
entropy density) of the SU(3) gauge theory from lattice field theory in an
unprecedented precision and temperature range. We control both finite size and
cut-off effects. The studied temperature window () stretches
from the glueball dominated system into the perturbative regime, which allows
us to discuss the range of validity of these approaches. From the critical
couplings on fine lattices we get T_c/\Lambdamsbar=1.26(7) and use this ratio
to express the perturbative free energy in units. We also determine the
preferred renormalization scale of the Hard Thermal Loop scheme and we fit the
unknown order perturbative coefficient at extreme high temperatures
. We furthermore quantify the nonperturbative contribution to the
trace anomaly using two simple functional forms.Comment: 7 pages, Contribution to the The XXVIII International Symposium on
Lattice Field Theory; June 14 - 19, 2010, Villasimius, Sardinia, Ital
Local CP-violation and electric charge separation by magnetic fields from lattice QCD
We study local CP-violation on the lattice by measuring the local correlation
between the topological charge density and the electric dipole moment of
quarks, induced by a constant external magnetic field. This correlator is found
to increase linearly with the external field, with the coefficient of
proportionality depending only weakly on temperature. Results are obtained on
lattices with various spacings, and are extrapolated to the continuum limit
after the renormalization of the observables is carried out. This
renormalization utilizes the gradient flow for the quark and gluon fields. Our
findings suggest that the strength of local CP-violation in QCD with physical
quark masses is about an order of magnitude smaller than a model prediction
based on nearly massless quarks in domains of constant gluon backgrounds with
topological charge. We also show numerical evidence that the observed local
CP-violation correlates with spatially extended electric dipole structures in
the QCD vacuum.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures. Additional lattice results about the induced
electric dipole structure, extended model description, specified terminology.
Version published in JHE
Determination of Freeze-out Conditions from Lattice QCD Calculations
Freeze-out conditions in Heavy Ion Collisions are generally determined by
comparing experimental results for ratios of particle yields with theoretical
predictions based on applications of the Hadron Resonance Gas model. We discuss
here how this model dependent determination of freeze-out parameters may
eventually be replaced by theoretical predictions based on equilibrium QCD
thermodynamics.Comment: presented at the International Conference "Critical Point and Onset
of Deconfinement - CPOD 2011", Wuhan, November 7-11, 201
Thermodynamic properties of QCD in external magnetic fields
We consider the effect of strong external electromagnetic fields on
thermodynamic observables in QCD, through lattice simulations with 1+1+1
flavors of staggered quarks at physical quark masses. Continuum extrapolated
results are presented for the light quark condensates and for their tensor
polarizations, as functions of the temperature and the magnetic field. We find
the light condensates to undergo inverse magnetic catalysis in the transition
region, in a manner that the transition temperature decreases with growing
magnetic field. We also compare the results to other approaches and lattice
simulations. Furthermore, we relate the tensor polarization to the spin part of
the magnetic susceptibility of the QCD vacuum, and show that this contribution
is diamagnetic.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, talks presented by FB and GE at Xth Quark
Confinement and the Hadron Spectrum, 8-12 October 2012, TUM Campus Garching,
Munich, German
QCD quark condensate in external magnetic fields
We present a comprehensive analysis of the light condensates in QCD with
1+1+1 sea quark flavors (with mass-degenerate light quarks of different
electric charges) at zero and nonzero temperatures of up to 190 MeV and
external magnetic fields B<1 GeV^2/e. We employ stout smeared staggered
fermions with physical quark masses and extrapolate the results to the
continuum limit. At low temperatures we confirm the magnetic catalysis scenario
predicted by many model calculations, while around the crossover the condensate
develops a complex dependence on the external magnetic field, resulting in a
decrease of the transition temperature.Comment: slight changes in the text, version accepted for publication in PRD.
5 pages, 5 figure
The QCD phase diagram for external magnetic fields
The effect of an external (electro)magnetic field on the finite temperature
transition of QCD is studied. We generate configurations at various values of
the quantized magnetic flux with flavors of stout smeared staggered
quarks, with physical masses. Thermodynamic observables including the chiral
condensate and susceptibility, and the strange quark number susceptibility are
measured as functions of the field strength. We perform the renormalization of
the studied observables and extrapolate the results to the continuum limit
using and 10 lattices. We also check for finite volume effects using
various lattice volumes. We find from all of our observables that the
transition temperature significantly decreases with increasing magnetic
field. This is in conflict with various model calculations that predict an
increasing . From a finite volume scaling analysis we find that the
analytic crossover that is present at B=0 persists up to our largest magnetic
fields , and that the transition strength
increases mildly up to this .Comment: 22 pages, 13 figure
Two-flavor QCD at finite temperature and chemical potential in a functional approach
We summarize recent results obtained in the Dyson-Schwinger formalism to
study the chiral and deconfinement phase transitions of quenched and unquenched
QCD at finite temperature and chemical potential. In the quenched case we
compare SU(2) and SU(3) gauge theories by taking lattice data for the gluon as
an input for the quark Dyson-Schwinger equation. As compared to previous
investigations we find a clearer distinction between the second order
transition of the two-color theory and the (weak) first order transition of the
three-color gauge theory. We then extend this study to unquenched QCD at finite
chemical potential by taking matter effects to the gluon into account and
investigate the order of the chiral phase transition and the behavior of the
deconfinement transition. What we find are coinciding phase transitions up to a
critical endpoint which is located at large chemical potential.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, contribution to the proceedings of the
International School of Nuclear Physics, Erice 201
An effective chiral Hadron-Quark Equation of State
We construct an effective model for the QCD equation of state, taking into
account chiral symmetry restoration as well as the deconfinement phase
transition. The correct asymptotic degrees of freedom at the high and low
temperature limits are included (quarks hadrons). The model
shows a rapid crossover for both order parameters, as is expected from lattice
calculations. We then compare the thermodynamic properties of the model at
which turn out to be in qualitative agreement with lattice data,
while apparent quantitative differences can be attributed to hadronic
contributions and excluded volume corrections. Furthermore we discuss the
effects of a repulsive vector type quark interaction at finite baryon number
densities on the resulting phase diagram of the model. Our current model is
able to reproduce a first-order liquid gas phase transition as expected, but
does not show any signs of a first order deconfinement or chiral phase
transition. Both transitions rather appear as a very wide crossover in which
heavily medium modified hadron coexist with free quarks.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures Version accepted by J. Phys.
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