Abstract

The comparison of the theoretical and experimental determinations of the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon $(g-2)_\mu$ constitutes one of the strongest tests of the Standard Model at low energies. In this article, we compute the leading hadronic contribution to $(g-2)_\mu$ using lattice QCD simulations employing Wilson quarks. Gauge field ensembles at four different lattice spacings and several values of the pion mass down to its physical value are used. We apply the O($a$) improvement programme with two discretizations of the vector current to better constrain the approach to the continuum limit. The electromagnetic current correlators are computed in the time-momentum representation. In addition, we perform auxiliary calculations of the pion form factor at timelike momenta in order to better constrain the tail of the isovector correlator and to correct its dominant finite-size effect. For the numerically dominant light-quark contribution, we have rescaled the lepton mass by the pion decay constant computed on each lattice ensemble. We perform a combined chiral and continuum extrapolation to the physical point, and our final result is $ a_\mu^{\rm hvp}=(720.0\pm12.4_{\rm stat}\,\pm9.9_{\rm syst})\cdot10^{-10}$. It contains the contributions of quark-disconnected diagrams, and the systematic error has been enlarged to account for the missing isospin-breaking effects.

Highlights

  • Electrons and muons carry a magnetic moment, which is correctly predicted by Dirac’s original theory of the electron to within a per mille of precision

  • In Dirac’s theory, g 1⁄4 2, and one characterizes the deviation of g from this reference value by al 1⁄4 ðg − 2Þl=2

  • Testing the ability of quantum electrodynamics (QED) to correctly predict this precision observable has played a crucial role in the development of quantum field theory in general

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Summary

Introduction

Electrons and muons carry a magnetic moment, which is correctly predicted by Dirac’s original theory of the electron to within a per mille of precision. Testing the ability of quantum electrodynamics (QED) to correctly predict this precision observable has played a crucial role in the development of quantum field theory in general. The achieved experimental precision of 540 ppb on the measurement of the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon [1], aμ, requires the effects of all three interactions of the Standard Model (SM) of particle physics to be included in the theory prediction.

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