Abstract

We study thermodynamic properties of Nf=2+1 QCD on the lattice adopting O(a)-improved Wilson quark action and Iwasaki gauge action. To cope with the problems due to explicit violation of the Poincare and chiral symmetries, we apply the Small Flow-time eXpansion (SFtX) method based on the gradient flow, which is a general method to correctly calculate any renormalized observables on the lattice. In this method, the matching coefficients in front of operators in the small flow-time expansion are calculated by perturbation theory. In a previous study using one-loop matching coefficients, we found that the SFtX method works well for the equation of state, chiral condensates and susceptibilities. In this paper, we study the effect of two-loop matching coefficients by Harlander et al. We also test the influence of the renormalization scale in the SFtX method. We find that, by adopting the mu_0 renormalization scale of Harlander et al. instead of the conventional mu_d=1/sqrt{8t} scale, the linear behavior at large t is improved so that we can perform the t -> 0 extrapolation of the SFtX method more confidently. In the calculation of the two-loop matching coefficients by Harlander et al., the equation of motion for quark fields was used. For the entropy density in which the equation of motion has no effects, we find that the results using the two-loop coefficients agree well with those using one-loop coefficients. On the other hand, for the trace anomaly which is affected by the equation of motion, we find discrepancies between the one- and two-loop results at high temperatures. By comparing the results of one-loop coefficients with and without using the equation of motion, the main origin of the discrepancies is suggested to be attributed to O((aT)^2)=O(1/N_t^2) discretization errors in the equation of motion at N_t =< 10.

Highlights

  • The gradient flow (GF) opened us a variety of new methods to significantly simplify the calculation of physical observables on the lattice [1,2,3,4,5]

  • In a previous study using one-loop matching coefficients, we found that the small flow-time expansion (SFtX) method works well for the equation of state extracted from diagonal components of the energy-momentum tensor and for the chiral condensates and susceptibilities

  • Adopting oneloop matching coefficients calculated in Refs. [10,12], we found that the equation of state (EoS) extracted from diagonal components of energy-momentum tensor (EMT) by the SFtX method is well consistent with that estimated with the conventional T-integration method at T ≲ 280 MeV (Nt ≳ 10) [33]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The gradient flow (GF) opened us a variety of new methods to significantly simplify the calculation of physical observables on the lattice [1,2,3,4,5]. We study finite-temperature QCD with 2 þ 1 flavors of dynamical quarks by applying the small flow-time expansion (SFtX) method based on the GF [9,10,11,12]. This is in clear contrast to their conventional lattice estimations: For example, a study with improved staggered quarks reports more than hundred times larger gluonic susceptibility than fermionic one at similar lattice spacings [34].2 These suggest that the SFtX method is powerful in calculating observables from lattice simulations. The EoM gets OðaÞ lattice corrections which may shift the results for the EMT Another point to be addressed in this paper is a technical issue of the choice of the renormalization scale in the matching coefficients of the SFtX method. In Appendix B, we confirm that the one-loop coefficients of Ref. [10] are consistent with the one-loop part of Ref. [35]

THE SFtX METHOD
Energy-momentum tensor with two-loop matching coefficients
SIMULATION PARAMETERS AND OUR NUMERICAL METHODS
RENORMALIZATION SCALE
Test of renormalization scales using one-loop matching coefficients
Results with the μ0-scale using one-loop matching coefficients
TEST OF TWO-LOOP MATCHING COEFFICIENTS
Entropy density
Trace anomaly
CONCLUSIONS
One-loop confirmation
Two-loop confirmation

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