2013
DOI: 10.1007/jhep07(2013)061
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Scale-dependent mass anomalous dimension from Dirac eigenmodes

Abstract: We investigate the eigenmodes of the massless Dirac operator to extract the scale-dependent fermion mass anomalous dimension gamma_m(mu). By combining simulations on multiple lattice volumes, and when possible several gauge couplings, we are able to measure the anomalous dimension across a wide range of energy scales. The method that we present is universal and can be applied to any lattice model of interest, including both conformal or chirally broken systems. We consider SU(3) lattice gauge theories with Nf=… Show more

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Cited by 98 publications
(124 citation statements)
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References 85 publications
(149 reference statements)
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“…This supports the idea that x = x c can be located by extracting γ * from the meson masses on the lattice. In fact, recent lattice results for γ * in the conformal window report very low values [75,107] that are in apparent contradiction of the curves in figure 8. Recall however that the model has not been tuned to fit any QCD data yet.…”
Section: Masses Near the Conformal Transitionmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…This supports the idea that x = x c can be located by extracting γ * from the meson masses on the lattice. In fact, recent lattice results for γ * in the conformal window report very low values [75,107] that are in apparent contradiction of the curves in figure 8. Recall however that the model has not been tuned to fit any QCD data yet.…”
Section: Masses Near the Conformal Transitionmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…An issue with using this method is that the exponent depends on the range of eigenvalues used to measure it. The authors of Cheng et al (2013) combine the intermediate and large eigenvalues to construct a "scale dependent mass anomalous dimension," whose scale in energy space is given by λ itself, and whose extrapolation to small λ gives the actual y m (assuming, of course, that the system studied is truly conformal). They are able to compare and contrast a confining theory (SU (3) with N f = 4 fundamentals) with a slowly running one (SU (3) with N f = 12 fundamentals), which they identify as conformal.…”
Section: Mass Anomalous Dimension From Dirac Eigenvaluesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These studies agreed in their conclusion that the model is outside the conformal window and spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking takes place. In [7] the mass anomalous dimension was investigated but a definite conclusion whether the model is inside or outside the conformal window could not be drawn from the data. In any case conformal behavior was not ruled out.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%