Flavour blindness and patterns of flavour symmetry breaking in lattice simulations of up, down and strange quarks



Bietenholz, W, Bornyakov, V, Göckeler, M, Horsley, R, Lockhart, WG, Nakamura, Y, Perlt, H, Pleiter, D, Rakow, PEL ORCID: 0000-0003-4486-2158, Schierholz, G
et al (show 5 more authors) (2011) Flavour blindness and patterns of flavour symmetry breaking in lattice simulations of up, down and strange quarks. Physical Review D, 84 (5). 054509-.

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Abstract

QCD lattice simulations with 2+1 flavours (when two quark flavours are mass degenerate) typically start at rather large up-down and strange quark masses and extrapolate first the strange quark mass and then the up-down quark mass to its respective physical value. Here we discuss an alternative method of tuning the quark masses, in which the singlet quark mass is kept fixed. Using group theory the possible quark mass polynomials for a Taylor expansion about the flavour symmetric line are found, first for the general 1+1+1 flavour case and then for the 2+1 flavour case. This ensures that the kaon always has mass less than the physical kaon mass. This method of tuning quark masses then enables highly constrained polynomial fits to be used in the extrapolation of hadron masses to their physical values. Numerical results for the 2+1 flavour case confirm the usefulness of this expansion and an extrapolation to the physical pion mass gives hadron mass values to within a few percent of their experimental values. Singlet quantities remain constant which allows the lattice spacing to be determined from hadron masses (without necessarily being at the physical point). Furthermore an extension of this programme to include partially quenched results is given.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: 89 pages, 25 figures, 30 tables, published version
Uncontrolled Keywords: hep-lat, hep-lat, hep-ph, nucl-th
Depositing User: Symplectic Admin
Date Deposited: 07 Dec 2018 14:43
Last Modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:29
DOI: 10.1103/physrevd.84.054509
Related URLs:
URI: https://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/id/eprint/3029721