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Topological susceptibility from twisted mass fermions using spectral projectors and the gradient flow

Constantia Alexandrou, Andreas Athenodorou, Krzysztof Cichy, Martha Constantinou, Derek P. Horkel, Karl Jansen, Giannis Koutsou, and Conor Larkin
Phys. Rev. D 97, 074503 – Published 3 April 2018

Abstract

We compare lattice QCD determinations of topological susceptibility using a gluonic definition from the gradient flow and a fermionic definition from the spectral-projector method. We use ensembles with dynamical light, strange and charm flavors of maximally twisted mass fermions. For both definitions of the susceptibility we employ ensembles at three values of the lattice spacing and several quark masses at each spacing. The data are fitted to chiral perturbation theory predictions with a discretization term to determine the continuum chiral condensate in the massless limit and estimate the overall discretization errors. We find that both approaches lead to compatible results in the continuum limit, but the gluonic ones are much more affected by cutoff effects. This finally yields a much smaller total error in the spectral-projector results. We show that there exists, in principle, a value of the spectral cutoff which would completely eliminate discretization effects in the topological susceptibility.

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  • Received 28 September 2017

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.97.074503

Published by the American Physical Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the published article’s title, journal citation, and DOI. Funded by SCOAP3.

Published by the American Physical Society

Physics Subject Headings (PhySH)

Particles & Fields

Authors & Affiliations

Constantia Alexandrou1,2, Andreas Athenodorou2,*, Krzysztof Cichy3,4,†, Martha Constantinou5, Derek P. Horkel5,‡, Karl Jansen6, Giannis Koutsou2, and Conor Larkin2

  • 1Department of Physics, University of Cyprus, P.O. Box 20537, 1678 Nicosia, Cyprus
  • 2Computation-based Science and Technology Research Center, Cyprus Institute, 20 Kavafi Str., Nicosia 2121, Cyprus
  • 3Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Institut für Theoretische Physik, Max-von-Laue-Strasse 1, 60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
  • 4Faculty of Physics, Adam Mickiewicz University, Umultowska 85, 61-614 Poznań, Poland
  • 5Physics Department, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19122-1801, USA
  • 6NIC, DESY, Platanenallee 6, D-15738 Zeuthen, Germany

  • *a.athenodorou@cyi.ac.cy
  • kcichy@amu.edu.pl
  • derek.horkel@temple.edu

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Vol. 97, Iss. 7 — 1 April 2018

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