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Lattice QCD at nonzero temperature and density

Gert Aarts Orcid Logo, Chris Allton Orcid Logo, S. Hands, B. Jäger, S. Kim, M. P. Lombardo, Aleksandr Nikolaev Orcid Logo, S. M. Ryan, J.-I. Skullerud

Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Volume: 2207, Issue: 1, Start page: 012055

Swansea University Authors: Gert Aarts Orcid Logo, Chris Allton Orcid Logo, Aleksandr Nikolaev Orcid Logo

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Abstract

We discuss some selected recent developments in the field of lattice QCD at nonzero temperature and density, describing in particular the transition from the hadronic gas to the quark-gluon plasma, as seen in simulations using Wilson fermions.

Published in: Journal of Physics: Conference Series
ISSN: 1742-6588 1742-6596
Published: IOP Publishing 2022
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa69024
Abstract: We discuss some selected recent developments in the field of lattice QCD at nonzero temperature and density, describing in particular the transition from the hadronic gas to the quark-gluon plasma, as seen in simulations using Wilson fermions.
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: Results presented in this work were obtained with support from STFC via grants ST/L000369/1 and ST/P00055X/1, the Swansea Academy for Advanced Computing, SNF, ICHEC, the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 813942. SK is supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea under grant NRF-2018R1A2A2A05018231fundedbytheKoreangovernment(MEST).AANalsoacknowledgesthe support by RFBR grant 18-32-20172 mol a ved. We are grateful to DiRAC, HPC Wales, PRACE and Supercomputing Wales for the use of their computing resources. Results presented in this work were obtained 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 eInfrastructure 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.
Issue: 1
Start Page: 012055