Computing jet transport coefficients on the lattice

28.03.2023, 14:00
20m
Cranach-Saal (Stadthalle)

Cranach-Saal

Stadthalle

Talk Jets and their modification in QCD matter Parallel: Jets and their modification in QCD Matter

Sprecher

Johannes Heinrich Weber (Humboldt-University of Berlin)

Beschreibung

The leading jet transport coefficients $\hat{q}$ or $\hat{e}_{2}$ encode transverse or longitudinal momentum broadening of a hard parton traversing a hot medium. Computing their normalization and temperature dependence from first principles is key to appreciating the observed suppression of high-transverse momentum probes at RHIC or LHC collision energies. We present a first continuum extrapolated result of $\hat{q}$ computed on pure SU(3) lattices with non-trivial temperature dependence different from the weak-coupling expectation.

We discuss the formalism published in Refs [1,2] and its challenges and status in view of obtaining $\hat{e}_{2}$ or of unquenching the calculation. We consider a hard quark subject to a single scattering on the plasma. The transport coefficients are factorized in terms of matrix elements given as integrals of non-local gauge-covariant gluon field-strength field-strength correlators. After the analytic continuation to the deep-Euclidean region, the hard scale permits to recast these as a series of local, gauge-invariant operators. The renormalized leading twist term in this expansion is closely related to static quantities, and is computed on pure SU(3) lattices ($n_{\tau}$=4, 6, 8 and 10) for a range of temperatures, ranging from 200MeV < T < 1GeV. Our estimate for the unquenched result in $2+1$-flavor QCD has very similar features.

[1] A. Kumar et al., Phys. Rev. D 106, 034505 (2022).
[2] A. Majumder, Phys. Rev. C87 034905 (2013).

Affiliation

Humboldt-University of Berlin
Wayne State University
McGill University

Experiment/Theory Theory/Phenomenology

Hauptautoren

Johannes Heinrich Weber (Humboldt-University of Berlin) Abhijit Majumder (Wayne State University) Amit Kumar (McGill University) Ismail Soudi (Wayne State University)

Präsentationsmaterialien