Abstract
Abstract We study latent heat and the pressure gap between the hot and cold phases at the first-order deconfining phase transition temperature of the SU(3) Yang–Mills theory. Performing simulations on lattices with various spatial volumes and lattice spacings, we calculate the gaps of the energy density and pressure using the small flow-time expansion (SF$t$X) method. We find that the latent heat $\Delta \epsilon$ in the continuum limit is $\Delta \epsilon /T^4 = 1.117 \pm 0.040$ for the aspect ratio $N_s/N_t=8$ and $1.349 \pm 0.038$ for $N_s/N_t=6$ at the transition temperature $T=T_c$. We also confirm that the pressure gap is consistent with zero, as expected from the dynamical balance of two phases at $T_c$. From hysteresis curves of the energy density near $T_c$, we show that the energy density in the (metastable) deconfined phase is sensitive to the spatial volume, while that in the confined phase is insensitive. Furthermore, we examine the effect of alternative procedures in the SF$t$X method—the order of the continuum and the vanishing flow-time extrapolations, and also the renormalization scale and higher-order corrections in the matching coefficients. We confirm that the final results are all very consistent with each other for these alternatives.
Highlights
First-order phase transitions appear in various important thermodynamic systems including the high density QCD and many-flavor QCD, and are associated with various phenomena such as phase coexistence and latent heat
We study the first-order phase transition of the SU(3) Yang-Mills theory adopting a new technique to calculate thermodynamic observables: the small flow time expansion (SFtX) method based on the gradient flow [8, 9]
We show that the next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) matching coefficients help to reduce lattice artifacts in the calculation of the latent heat
Summary
First-order phase transitions appear in various important thermodynamic systems including the high density QCD and many-flavor QCD, and are associated with various phenomena such as phase coexistence and latent heat. We study the first-order phase transition of the SU(3) Yang-Mills theory adopting a new technique to calculate thermodynamic observables: the small flow time expansion (SFtX) method based on the gradient flow [8, 9]. We apply the SFtX method to calculate the energy density and pressure separately in hot and cold phases at the first-order deconfining phase transition temperature of the SU(3) Yang-Mills theory. When a proper fitting range avoiding small t singularities at a > 0 is chosen, the final results should be insensitive to the order of these limits We confirm this for the latent heat and pressure gap in the SU(3) Yang-Mills theory. In Appendix B, we discuss the choice of lattice operator for the field strength
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