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Meson thermal masses at different temperatures

Sergio Chaves Garcia-Mascaraque, Gert Aarts Orcid Logo, Chris Allton Orcid Logo, Timothy Burns Orcid Logo, Simon Hands, Benjamin Jaeger

Proceedings of The 38th International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory — PoS(LATTICE2021), Volume: 396

Swansea University Authors: Sergio Chaves Garcia-Mascaraque, Gert Aarts Orcid Logo, Chris Allton Orcid Logo, Timothy Burns Orcid Logo

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DOI (Published version): 10.22323/1.396.0523

Abstract

We determine the ground state meson masses at low temperature using simulations with 2+1 flavours of improved Wilson-clover fermions. Subsequently we study the effect of increasing the temperature of the hadron gas, including the transition to the quark-gluon plasma, as well as therestoration of SU(...

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Published in: Proceedings of The 38th International Symposium on Lattice Field Theory — PoS(LATTICE2021)
ISSN: 1824-8039
Published: Trieste, Italy Sissa Medialab 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa61689
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Abstract: We determine the ground state meson masses at low temperature using simulations with 2+1 flavours of improved Wilson-clover fermions. Subsequently we study the effect of increasing the temperature of the hadron gas, including the transition to the quark-gluon plasma, as well as therestoration of SU(2)A chiral symmetry. We use the FASTSUM anisotropic, fixed-scale Generation2L ensembles and consider mesons with light, strange and charm content.
Item Description: Oral presentation
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: This work is supported by the UKRI Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) Consolidated Grant No. ST/P00055X/1 and ST/T000813/1. We are grateful to DiRAC, PRACE and Supercomputing Wales for the use of their computing resources and to the Swansea Academy for Advanced Computing for support. This work was performed using the PRACE Marconi-KNL resources hosted by CINECA, Italy and the DiRAC Extreme Scaling service and Blue Gene Q Shared Petaflop system at the University of Edinburgh operated by the Edinburgh Parallel Computing Centre. The DiRAC equipment is part of the UK’s National e-Infrastructure and was funded by UK’s BIS National e-infrastructure capital grant ST/K000411/1, STFC capital grants ST/H008845/1 and ST/R00238X/1, and STFC DiRAC Operations grants ST/K005804/1, ST/K005790/1 and ST/R001006/1.