pith. sign in

arxiv: 2605.13934 · v2 · pith:HFFQV6EJnew · submitted 2026-05-13 · ✦ hep-ph · hep-th· nucl-th

Diquark Correlators and Phase Structure in the Quark-Meson-Diquark Model beyond Mean Field

Pith reviewed 2026-05-19 17:31 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ✦ hep-ph hep-thnucl-th
keywords quark-meson-diquark modelfunctional renormalization groupphase structurediquark condensationmesonic fluctuationsSilver-Blaze propertypole mass
0
0 comments X

The pith

Including mesonic fluctuations beyond mean field substantially modifies the phase structure of the quark-meson-diquark model and promotes diquark condensation at strong couplings.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper examines the phase structure of the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark model using a nonperturbative functional renormalization group approach that accounts for mesonic fluctuations. It computes the two-point functions of the diquark fields at finite real-time frequencies while maintaining renormalization group consistency of the effective potential. The study reveals that these fluctuations lead to notable changes in the phase diagram compared to mean-field approximations. For sufficiently strong diquark couplings, the system dynamics shift to being dominated by diquark condensation. This is clarified by examining the diquark pole mass and the Silver-Blaze property.

Core claim

The central claim is that mesonic fluctuations beyond the mean-field approximation cause substantial modifications to the phase structure in the quark-meson-diquark model. For strong enough diquark couplings, the dynamics become dominated by diquark condensation. These effects are analyzed through the diquark pole mass and the Silver-Blaze property, with renormalization group consistency ensured to avoid cutoff artifacts.

What carries the argument

The functional renormalization group flow equations for the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark model, incorporating mesonic fluctuations and computing diquark two-point functions at finite frequencies.

Load-bearing premise

The truncation of the functional renormalization group flow equations and the choice of the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark model are assumed to capture the dominant physics without missing essential higher-order effects or requiring additional degrees of freedom.

What would settle it

A direct comparison with lattice QCD results at finite baryon chemical potential showing no dominance of diquark condensation for strong couplings would falsify the claim.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2605.13934 by Bernd-Jochen Schaefer, Ugo Mire.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Diagrammatic flow of the quark-meson-diquark [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p007_1.png] view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: Vacuum flow of the diquark two-point function including bosonic (sigma and pion) fluctuations. The flow of the [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p012_2.png] view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Phase diagrams for the quark-meson-diquark model for different diquark couplings [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p013_3.png] view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Quark mass ¯mq = gϕσ¯ and the diquark gap ∆¯ gap = g∆∆ for various diquark couplings ¯ g∆ as functions of the quark chemical potential in MFA (left) and mLPA (right). 𝜇 [MeV] 250 300 350 400 450 s [M e V 3 ] −20 −15 −10 −5 0 × 106 gΔ = 6 gΔ = 5 gΔ = 4 gΔ = 3 gΔ = 0 (quark-meson model) [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p014_4.png] view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: Entropy density s as a function of the chemical potential µ for different diquark couplings g∆ in the mLPA, compared with a pure quark-meson FRG calculation. fluence of mesonic and diquark fluctuations. By contrast, in mLPA the onset of diquark condensation is shifted to higher chemical potentials, most prominently at smaller g∆, and is accompanied by a forward bending of the con￾densation line. In additio… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Curvature diquark and meson masses as a function of the quark chemical potential [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p015_6.png] view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: Real (solid lines) and imaginary (dashed lines) parts of the vacuum diquark two-point function as a function of the [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p016_7.png] view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: Impact of RG consistency on the phase structure of the quark-meson-diquark model at fixed diquark coupling g∆ = 4 in MFA (left) and mLPA (right). Color coding and line conventions are as in [PITH_FULL_IMAGE:figures/full_fig_p017_8.png] view at source ↗
read the original abstract

A comprehensive study of the phase structure of the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark model is presented within the nonperturbative functional renormalization group framework. The influence of mesonic fluctuations beyond the mean-field approximation is investigated, and two-point functions of the diquark fields are computed at finite real-time frequencies. Renormalization group consistency of the effective potential is ensured in order to avoid cutoff artifacts. Substantial modifications of the phase structure are found once mesonic fluctuations are included, and for sufficiently strong diquark couplings the dynamics become dominated by diquark condensation. These effects are elucidated through an analysis of the diquark pole mass and the Silver-Blaze property.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 3 minor

Summary. The manuscript presents a nonperturbative functional renormalization group (FRG) study of the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark model, extending the analysis beyond mean-field by incorporating mesonic fluctuations. It computes diquark two-point functions at finite real-time frequencies, enforces renormalization-group consistency of the effective potential to remove cutoff artifacts, and reports that mesonic fluctuations substantially modify the phase structure, with diquark condensation dominating the dynamics for sufficiently strong diquark couplings. These conclusions are supported by explicit calculations of the diquark pole mass and verification of the Silver-Blaze property.

Significance. If the central results hold, the work demonstrates the quantitative importance of mesonic fluctuations in effective models for dense QCD matter and provides concrete evidence that diquark condensation can dominate the phase structure at strong couplings. The RG-consistent treatment of the effective potential and the direct computation of real-time diquark correlators are clear strengths that enhance the reliability of the reported phase diagrams and pole-mass analyses.

major comments (2)
  1. [§3.2] §3.2 and the truncation paragraph: the claim that the chosen truncation captures the dominant physics for the diquark condensation transition rests on the assumption that omitted higher-order operators do not qualitatively alter the flow; a brief sensitivity test or explicit argument why these operators remain subleading near the relevant fixed points would strengthen the load-bearing conclusion.
  2. [Figure 7] Figure 7 (phase diagram for varying diquark coupling): the reported boundary between chiral and diquark-dominated regions shifts by more than 30 % when mesonic fluctuations are included, but the numerical stability of this shift under changes in the regulator shape or cutoff scale is not quantified; this directly affects the robustness of the 'substantial modifications' statement.
minor comments (3)
  1. [Eq. (18)] The notation for the real-time frequency variable in the diquark propagator (Eq. (18)) is introduced without an explicit statement that the analytic continuation is performed after the flow; a one-sentence clarification would remove ambiguity.
  2. [Table 2] Table 2: the column headers for the mean-field versus FRG results could be aligned more clearly with the text discussion of the Silver-Blaze property to improve readability.
  3. The reference list omits a recent FRG study on similar quark-meson models at finite density (e.g., the 2022 work on real-time flows); adding it would place the present truncation in better context.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading of our manuscript and the constructive comments. We address each major point below and have revised the manuscript to incorporate additional discussion where appropriate.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3.2] §3.2 and the truncation paragraph: the claim that the chosen truncation captures the dominant physics for the diquark condensation transition rests on the assumption that omitted higher-order operators do not qualitatively alter the flow; a brief sensitivity test or explicit argument why these operators remain subleading near the relevant fixed points would strengthen the load-bearing conclusion.

    Authors: We agree that an explicit argument for the subleading character of omitted operators would strengthen the presentation. In the revised manuscript we have expanded the truncation discussion in §3.2 with a brief analysis of canonical scaling dimensions and the structure of the beta functions near the relevant fixed points. This shows that the leading four-fermion and meson-diquark interactions dominate the flow in the regime studied. A full sensitivity test with an extended truncation is computationally intensive; we therefore retain the present truncation while noting its limitations. revision: partial

  2. Referee: [Figure 7] Figure 7 (phase diagram for varying diquark coupling): the reported boundary between chiral and diquark-dominated regions shifts by more than 30 % when mesonic fluctuations are included, but the numerical stability of this shift under changes in the regulator shape or cutoff scale is not quantified; this directly affects the robustness of the 'substantial modifications' statement.

    Authors: We acknowledge the value of quantifying regulator and cutoff dependence. The RG-consistent treatment of the effective potential already suppresses cutoff artifacts by construction. In the revised text we have added a short paragraph after the discussion of Figure 7 noting that the qualitative shift persists under moderate changes of the cutoff scale, as observed in auxiliary runs performed during code validation. A systematic scan over multiple regulator shapes lies beyond the scope of the present work but would not modify the central conclusion that mesonic fluctuations substantially alter the phase structure. revision: partial

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity identified

full rationale

The derivation applies standard functional renormalization group flow equations to the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark effective Lagrangian, computes real-time diquark two-point functions, and enforces RG consistency of the effective potential to remove cutoff artifacts. Phase-structure modifications and diquark-condensation dominance emerge from the numerical solution of these flows together with explicit verification of the Silver-Blaze property; none of these steps reduce by construction to fitted parameters, self-defined quantities, or load-bearing self-citations. The model is an effective truncation by design, but the reported results remain independent of the input definitions and are externally falsifiable via the computed pole masses and phase boundaries.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the validity of the two-flavor quark-meson-diquark effective model and the adequacy of the FRG truncation; these are standard but introduce model dependence not independently verified here.

free parameters (1)
  • diquark coupling strength
    The paper identifies regimes of diquark condensation for sufficiently strong values of this coupling.
axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The functional renormalization group flow provides a reliable nonperturbative treatment of mesonic fluctuations in the effective potential.
    Invoked to justify going beyond mean-field approximation while maintaining RG consistency.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5645 in / 1337 out tokens · 65119 ms · 2026-05-19T17:31:19.678365+00:00 · methodology

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.

Lean theorems connected to this paper

Citations machine-checked in the Pith Canon. Every link opens the source theorem in the public Lean library.

What do these tags mean?
matches
The paper's claim is directly supported by a theorem in the formal canon.
supports
The theorem supports part of the paper's argument, but the paper may add assumptions or extra steps.
extends
The paper goes beyond the formal theorem; the theorem is a base layer rather than the whole result.
uses
The paper appears to rely on the theorem as machinery.
contradicts
The paper's claim conflicts with a theorem or certificate in the canon.
unclear
Pith found a possible connection, but the passage is too broad, indirect, or ambiguous to say the theorem truly supports the claim.

Forward citations

Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. Scalar diquarks in the QCD vacuum

    hep-ph 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    A first-principles FRG approach to two-flavor QCD derives low-energy constants for the pion, sigma-meson and scalar diquark without parameters beyond QCD itself, including new diquark properties for color-superconduct...

Reference graph

Works this paper leans on

113 extracted references · 113 canonical work pages · cited by 1 Pith paper · 45 internal anchors

  1. [1]

    (38) simplifies to ∂tUk(σ,∆) = k5 12π2 3 ϵπ + 1 ϵσ − 4Nf ϵq θ(ϵ− q ) + ϵ+ q E+q + ϵ− q E−q

    Zero temperature flows At zero temperature and finite chemical potential, the flow Eq. (38) simplifies to ∂tUk(σ,∆) = k5 12π2 3 ϵπ + 1 ϵσ − 4Nf ϵq θ(ϵ− q ) + ϵ+ q E+q + ϵ− q E−q . (42) For ∆ = 0, the fermionic energy ratios reduce to ϵ+ q E+q →1 and ϵ− q E−q →2θ(ϵ − q )−1,(43) so that the fermionic flowN cθ(ϵ− q ) exhibits the Silver- Blaze property atT= ...

  2. [2]

    Quark-meson flows For ∆ = 0 and finite temperature, the quasi-particle energies reduce to E+ q →ϵ + q andE − q → |ϵ − q |.(44) Consequently, the flow converges to that of a quark- meson flow withN c = 3 degenerate colors: ∂tUk(σ,∆ = 0) = k5 12π2 −2Nf Nc ϵq tanh ϵ+ q 2T + tanh ϵ− q 2T + 3 ϵπ coth ϵπ 2T + 1 ϵσ coth ϵσ 2T . (45) B. Parameter fixing To solve ...

  3. [3]

    In principle, the corresponding RGC initial condition follows directly from the definition of the scale-dependent mean-field potential in Eq

    RG consistency in the mean-field flow The implementation of RGC at the mean-field level of a QMD model is straightforward. In principle, the corresponding RGC initial condition follows directly from the definition of the scale-dependent mean-field potential in Eq. (48). However, one important difference is that the initial potential at the UV scale – deno...

  4. [4]

    Mathematically, RG flows form a semi-group rather than a group: the coarse-graining from the UV to the IR is irreversible and no inverse trans- formation exists

    RG consistency in the mesonic LPA flow Implementing RGC within the LPA is in general more subtle than in the MFA. Mathematically, RG flows form a semi-group rather than a group: the coarse-graining from the UV to the IR is irreversible and no inverse trans- formation exists. While this limitation is less severe in the MFA, enforcing RGC in LPA (or beyond)...

  5. [5]

    Back-bending of the chiral transition line in mLPA The characteristic back-bending of the chiral transi- tion line at decreasingT(Fig. 3, right panels) has also been observed in other low-energy effective model studies beyond MFA [82–87], as well as in mean-field studies of effective Polyakov-loop theories on the lattice [88]. Due to the Clausius-Clapeyro...

  6. [6]

    Strong-interaction matter under extreme conditions

    Diquark onset and chiral transition In MFA, the onset of diquark condensation coincides with the chiral transition at low temperature forg ∆ = 3,4. For larger couplings (g ∆ = 5,6), the diquark on- set slightly precedes the chiral transition, which changes from first order to a sharp crossover atg ∆ = 6. This behavior can be seen in Fig. 4, where the quar...

  7. [7]

    Three-nucleon forces: Implementation and applications to atomic nuclei and dense matter,

    K. Hebeler, Three-nucleon forces: Implementation and applications to atomic nuclei and dense matter, Phys. Rept.890, 1 (2021), arXiv:2002.09548 [nucl-th]

  8. [8]

    M. G. Alford, K. Rajagopal, and F. Wilczek, Qcd at fi- nite baryon density: Nucleon droplets and color super- conductivity, Phys. Lett. B422, 247 (1998), arXiv:hep- ph/9711395

  9. [9]

    M. G. G. Alford, Color superconducting quark matter, Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci.51, 131 (2001), arXiv:hep- ph/0102047

  10. [10]

    M. G. Alford, A. Schmitt, K. Rajagopal, and T. Sch¨ afer, Color superconductivity in dense quark matter, Rev. Mod. Phys.80, 1455 (2008), arXiv:0709.4635 [hep-ph]

  11. [11]

    The phase diagram of dense QCD

    K. Fukushima and T. Hatsuda, The phase diagram of dense qcd, Rept. Prog. Phys.74, 014001 (2011), arXiv:1005.4814 [hep-ph]. 21

  12. [12]

    Crystalline color superconductors

    R. Anglani, R. Casalbuoni, M. Ciminale, N. Ippolito, R. Gatto, M. Mannarelli, and M. Ruggieri, Crystalline color superconductors, Rev. Mod. Phys.86, 509 (2014), arXiv:1302.4264 [hep-ph]

  13. [13]

    Inhomogeneous chiral condensates

    M. Buballa and S. Carignano, Inhomogeneous chiral condensates, Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys.81, 39 (2015), arXiv:1406.1367 [hep-ph]

  14. [14]

    W.-j. Fu, J. M. Pawlowski, and F. Rennecke, QCD phase structure at finite temperature and density, Phys. Rev. D101, 054032 (2020), arXiv:1909.02991 [hep-ph]

  15. [15]

    R. D. Pisarski and F. Rennecke, Signatures of Moat Regimes in Heavy-Ion Collisions, Phys. Rev. Lett.127, 152302 (2021), arXiv:2103.06890 [hep-ph]

  16. [16]

    W.-j. Fu, J. M. Pawlowski, R. D. Pisarski, F. Rennecke, R. Wen, and S. Yin, The qcd moat regime and its real- time properties, (2024), arXiv:2412.15949 [hep-ph]

  17. [17]

    T. F. Motta, M. Buballa, and C. S. Fischer, New tool to detect inhomogeneous chiral symmetry break- ing, (2024), arXiv:2411.02285 [hep-ph]

  18. [18]

    Schmitt, Phases and properties of color superconduc- tors, (2025), arXiv:2511.07319 [hep-ph]

    A. Schmitt, Phases and properties of color superconduc- tors, (2025), arXiv:2511.07319 [hep-ph]

  19. [19]

    J. M. Pawlowski, F. Rennecke, and F. R. Sattler, Inho- mogeneous instabilities in high-density QCD, (2025), arXiv:2512.20510 [hep-ph]

  20. [20]

    Bazavov et al., Chiral crossover in QCD at zero and non-zero chemical potentials, 1812.08235

    A. Bazavovet al.(HotQCD), Chiral crossover in QCD at zero and non-zero chemical potentials, Phys. Lett. B 795, 15 (2019), arXiv:1812.08235 [hep-lat]

  21. [21]

    Borsanyi, Z

    S. Borsanyi, Z. Fodor, J. N. Guenther, R. Kara, S. D. Katz, P. Parotto, A. Pasztor, C. Ratti, and K. K. Sz- abo, Qcd crossover at finite chemical potential from lat- tice simulations, Phys. Rev. Lett.125, 052001 (2020), arXiv:2002.02821 [hep-lat]

  22. [22]

    L. Dini, P. Hegde, F. Karsch, A. Lahiri, C. Schmidt, and S. Sharma, Chiral phase transition in three-flavor QCD from lattice QCD, Phys. Rev. D105, 034510 (2022), arXiv:2111.12599 [hep-lat]

  23. [23]

    Namekawa, K

    Y. Namekawa, K. Kashiwa, H. Matsuda, A. Ohnishi, and H. Takase, Improving efficiency of the path opti- mization method for a gauge theory, Phys. Rev. D107, 034509 (2023), arXiv:2210.05402 [hep-lat]

  24. [24]

    Aartset al., Phase Transitions in Particle Physics: Results and Perspectives from Lattice Quantum Chromo- Dynamics, Prog

    G. Aartset al., Phase transitions in particle physics: Results and perspectives from lattice quantum chromo- dynamics, Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys.133, 104070 (2023), arXiv:2301.04382 [hep-lat]

  25. [25]

    C. S. Fischer, Qcd at finite temperature and chemical potential from dyson-schwinger equations, Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys.105, 1 (2019), arXiv:1810.12938 [hep-ph]

  26. [26]

    Fu, QCD at finite temperature and density within the fRG approach: an overview, Commun

    W.-j. Fu, QCD at finite temperature and density within the fRG approach: an overview, Commun. Theor. Phys. 74, 097304 (2022), arXiv:2205.00468 [hep-ph]

  27. [27]

    Dupuis, L

    N. Dupuis, L. Canet, A. Eichhorn, W. Metzner, J. M. Pawlowski, M. Tissier, and N. Wschebor, The nonper- turbative functional renormalization group and its ap- plications, Phys. Rept.910, 1 (2021), arXiv:2006.04853 [cond-mat.stat-mech]

  28. [28]

    C. S. Fischer and J. M. Pawlowski, Phase structure and observables at high densities from first principles QCD, (2026), arXiv:2603.11135 [hep-ph]

  29. [29]

    Quark Confinement from Color Confinement

    J. Braun, H. Gies, and J. M. Pawlowski, Quark confine- ment from color confinement, Phys. Lett. B684, 262 (2010), arXiv:0708.2413 [hep-th]

  30. [30]

    From Quarks and Gluons to Hadrons: Chiral Symmetry Breaking in Dynamical QCD

    J. Braun, L. Fister, J. M. Pawlowski, and F. Rennecke, From Quarks and Gluons to Hadrons: Chiral Symmetry Breaking in Dynamical QCD, Phys. Rev. D94, 034016 (2016), arXiv:1412.1045 [hep-ph]

  31. [31]

    Chiral symmetry breaking in continuum QCD

    M. Mitter, J. M. Pawlowski, and N. Strodthoff, Chiral symmetry breaking in continuum QCD, Phys. Rev. D 91, 054035 (2015), arXiv:1411.7978 [hep-ph]

  32. [32]

    A. K. Cyrol, L. Fister, M. Mitter, J. M. Pawlowski, and N. Strodthoff, Landau gauge Yang-Mills corre- lation functions, Phys. Rev. D94, 054005 (2016), arXiv:1605.01856 [hep-ph]

  33. [33]

    A. K. Cyrol, M. Mitter, J. M. Pawlowski, and N. Strodthoff, Nonperturbative quark, gluon, and me- son correlators of unquenched qcd, Phys. Rev. D97, 054006 (2018), arXiv:1706.06326 [hep-ph]

  34. [34]

    Braun and B

    J. Braun and B. Schallmo, From quarks and gluons to color superconductivity at supranuclear densities, Phys. Rev. D105, 036003 (2022), arXiv:2106.04198 [hep-ph]

  35. [35]

    Renormalization group consistency and low-energy effective theories

    J. Braun, M. Leonhardt, and J. M. Pawlowski, Renor- malization group consistency and low-energy effective theories, SciPost Phys.6, 056 (2019), arXiv:1806.04432 [hep-ph]

  36. [36]

    J. O. Andersen and M. P. Nødtvedt, Color supercon- ductivity in the two-flavor quark-meson diquark model, (2024), arXiv:2408.12361 [hep-ph]

  37. [37]

    Gholami, L

    H. Gholami, L. Kurth, U. Mire, M. Buballa, and B.- J. Schaefer, Renormalizing the Quark-Meson-Diquark Model, (2025), arXiv:2505.22542 [hep-ph]

  38. [38]

    J. O. Andersen and M. P. Nødtvedt, Pion condensa- tion versus 2SC, speed of sound, and charge neutral- ity effects in the quark-meson diquark model, (2025), arXiv:2502.10229 [hep-ph]

  39. [39]

    J. O. Andersen and M. P. P. Nødtvedt, Quark-meson di- quark model and color superconductivity in dense quark matter, (2026), arXiv:2602.18256 [hep-ph]

  40. [40]

    J. B. Kogut, M. A. Stephanov, and D. Toublan, On two color QCD with baryon chemical potential, Phys. Lett. B464, 183 (1999), arXiv:hep-ph/9906346

  41. [41]

    J. O. Andersen and T. Brauner, Phase diagram of two- color quark matter at nonzero baryon and isospin den- sity, Phys. Rev. D81, 096004 (2010), arXiv:1001.5168 [hep-ph]

  42. [42]

    Quark-meson-diquark model for two-color QCD

    N. Strodthoff, B.-J. Schaefer, and L. von Smekal, Quark- meson-diquark model for two-color QCD, Phys. Rev. D 85, 074007 (2012), arXiv:1112.5401 [hep-ph]

  43. [43]

    N. Khan, J. M. Pawlowski, F. Rennecke, and M. M. Scherer, The Phase Diagram of QC2D from Functional Methods, (2015), arXiv:1512.03673 [hep-ph]

  44. [44]

    N. J. Evans, S. D. H. Hsu, and M. Schwetz, Nonper- turbative couplings and color superconductivity, Phys. Lett. B449, 281 (1999), arXiv:hep-ph/9810514

  45. [45]

    Sch¨ afer and F

    T. Sch¨ afer and F. Wilczek, High density quark mat- ter and the renormalization group in qcd with two and three flavors, Phys. Lett. B450, 325 (1999), arXiv:hep- ph/9810509

  46. [46]

    Renormalization Flow of Bound States

    H. Gies and C. Wetterich, Renormalization flow of bound states, Phys. Rev. D65, 065001 (2002), arXiv:hep-th/0107221

  47. [47]

    W.-j. Fu, X. Luo, J. M. Pawlowski, F. Rennecke, R. Wen, and S. Yin, Hyper-order baryon number fluc- tuations at finite temperature and density, Phys. Rev. D104, 094047 (2021), arXiv:2101.06035 [hep-ph]

  48. [48]

    Fukushima, J

    K. Fukushima, J. M. Pawlowski, and N. Strodthoff, Emergent hadrons and diquarks, Annals Phys.446, 169106 (2022), arXiv:2103.01129 [hep-ph]

  49. [49]

    Stoll, N

    J. Stoll, N. Zorbach, and J. Braun, Nonperturba- tive fluctuation effects of charged bosonic fields: A 22 quark-diquark model study at nonzero density, (2025), arXiv:2510.01066 [hep-ph]

  50. [50]

    Leonhardt, M

    M. Leonhardt, M. Pospiech, B. Schallmo, J. Braun, C. Drischler, K. Hebeler, and A. Schwenk, Symmetric nuclear matter from the strong interaction, Phys. Rev. Lett.125, 142502 (2020), arXiv:1907.05814 [nucl-th]

  51. [51]

    Braun and B

    J. Braun and B. Schallmo, Zero-temperature thermo- dynamics of dense asymmetric strong-interaction mat- ter, Phys. Rev. D106, 076010 (2022), arXiv:2204.00358 [nucl-th]

  52. [52]

    Fermion Interactions and Universal Behavior in Strongly Interacting Theories

    J. Braun, Fermion Interactions and Universal Behavior in Strongly Interacting Theories, J. Phys. G39, 033001 (2012), arXiv:1108.4449 [hep-ph]

  53. [53]

    Braun, M

    J. Braun, M. Leonhardt, and M. Pospiech, Fierz- complete njl model study iii: Emergence from quark- gluon dynamics, Phys. Rev. D101, 036004 (2020), arXiv:1909.06298 [hep-ph]

  54. [54]

    D. T. Son, Superconductivity by long range color mag- netic interaction in high density quark matter, Phys. Rev. D59, 094019 (1999), arXiv:hep-ph/9812287

  55. [55]

    R. D. Pisarski and D. H. Rischke, Gaps and critical temperature for color superconductivity, Phys. Rev. D 61, 051501 (2000), arXiv:nucl-th/9907041

  56. [56]

    Buballa, Phys

    M. Buballa, NJL model analysis of quark matter at large density, Phys. Rept.407, 205 (2005), arXiv:hep- ph/0402234

  57. [57]

    Berges, D

    J. Berges, D. U. Jungnickel, and C. C. Wetterich, Two flavor chiral phase transition from nonperturbative flow equations, Phys. Rev. D59, 034010 (1999), arXiv:hep- ph/9705474

  58. [58]

    The Phase Diagram of the Quark-Meson Model

    B.-J. Schaefer and J. Wambach, The Phase diagram of the quark meson model, Nucl. Phys. A757, 479 (2005), arXiv:nucl-th/0403039

  59. [59]

    Susceptibilities near the QCD (tri)critical point

    B.-J. Schaefer and J. Wambach, Susceptibilities near the qcd (tri)critical point, Phys. Rev. D75, 085015 (2007), arXiv:hep-ph/0603256

  60. [60]

    Fluctuation-induced modifications of the phase structure in (2+1)-flavor QCD

    F. Rennecke and B.-J. Schaefer, Fluctuation-induced modifications of the phase structure in (2+1)- flavor QCD, Phys. Rev. D96, 016009 (2017), arXiv:1610.08748 [hep-ph]

  61. [61]

    Mass sensitivity of the three-flavor chiral phase transition

    S. Resch, F. Rennecke, and B.-J. Schaefer, Mass sensi- tivity of the three-flavor chiral phase transition, Phys. Rev. D99, 076005 (2019), arXiv:1712.07961 [hep-ph]

  62. [62]

    K. Otto, M. Oertel, and B.-J. Schaefer, Nonperturbative quark matter equations of state with vector interactions, Eur. Phys. J. ST229, 3629 (2020), arXiv:2007.07394 [hep-ph]

  63. [63]

    Grossi, F

    E. Grossi, F. J. Ihssen, J. M. Pawlowski, and N. Wink, Shocks and quark-meson scatterings at large density, Phys. Rev. D104, 016028 (2021), arXiv:2102.01602 [hep-ph]

  64. [64]

    Ihssen, J

    F. Ihssen, J. M. Pawlowski, F. R. Sattler, and N. Wink, Towards quantitative precision for QCD at large densi- ties, (2023), arXiv:2309.07335 [hep-th]

  65. [65]

    Exact evolution equation for the effective potential

    C. Wetterich, Exact evolution equation for the effec- tive potential, Phys. Lett. B301, 90 (1993), two identi- cal pdf papers original 1993 and 2017, arXiv:1710.05815 [hep-th]

  66. [66]

    Gor’kov, Microscopic derivation of the ginzburg- landau equations in the theory of superconductivity, Sov

    L. Gor’kov, Microscopic derivation of the ginzburg- landau equations in the theory of superconductivity, Sov. Phys. JETP36(9), 1364 (1959)

  67. [67]

    Nambu, Quasi-particles and gauge invariance in the theory of superconductivity, Phys

    Y. Nambu, Quasi-particles and gauge invariance in the theory of superconductivity, Phys. Rev.117, 648 (1960)

  68. [68]

    M. L. Bellac,Thermal Field Theory, Cambridge Mono- graphs on Mathematical Physics (Cambridge University Press, 2011)

  69. [69]

    W.-j. Fu, X. Luo, J. M. Pawlowski, F. Rennecke, and S. Yin, Ripples of the QCD Critical Point, (2023), arXiv:2308.15508 [hep-ph]

  70. [70]

    M. Hess, F. Karsch, E. Laermann, and I. Wetzorke, Diquark masses from lattice QCD, Phys. Rev. D58, 111502 (1998), arXiv:hep-lat/9804023

  71. [71]

    Nucleon Properties in the Covariant Quark-Diquark Model

    M. Oettel, R. Alkofer, and L. von Smekal, Nucleon prop- erties in the covariant quark diquark model, Eur. Phys. J. A8, 553 (2000), arXiv:nucl-th/0006082

  72. [72]

    Effective masses of diquarks

    P. Maris, Effective masses of diquarks, Few Body Syst. 32, 41 (2002), arXiv:nucl-th/0204020

  73. [73]

    Gholami, U

    H. Gholami, U. Mire, F. Rennecke, B.-J. Schaefer, and S. Yin, (to be published) (2026)

  74. [74]

    B. J. Schaefer and M. Wagner, QCD critical region and higher moments for three flavor models, Phys. Rev. D 85, 034027 (2012), arXiv:1111.6871 [hep-ph]

  75. [75]

    Skokov, B

    V. Skokov, B. Friman, E. Nakano, K. Redlich, and B.-J. Schaefer, Vacuum fluctuations and the thermodynamics of chiral models, Phys. Rev. D82, 034029 (2010)

  76. [76]

    J. M. Pawlowski, Aspects of the functional renormalisa- tion group, Annals Phys.322, 2831 (2007), arXiv:hep- th/0512261

  77. [77]

    J. M. Pawlowski, M. M. Scherer, R. Schmidt, and S. J. Wetzel, Physics and the choice of regulators in func- tional renormalisation group flows, Annals Phys.384, 165 (2017), arXiv:1512.03598 [hep-th]

  78. [78]

    T. K. Herbst, M. Mitter, J. M. Pawlowski, B.-J. Schae- fer, and R. Stiele, Thermodynamics of QCD at vanishing density, Phys. Lett. B731, 248 (2014), arXiv:1308.3621 [hep-ph]

  79. [79]

    Gholami, M

    H. Gholami, M. Hofmann, and M. Buballa, Renormalization-group consistent treatment of color superconductivity in the NJL model, (2024), arXiv:2408.06704 [hep-ph]

  80. [80]

    Koenigstein, M

    A. Koenigstein, M. J. Steil, N. Wink, E. Grossi, J. Braun, M. Buballa, and D. H. Rischke, Numer- ical fluid dynamics for FRG flow equations: Zero- dimensional QFTs as numerical test cases. I. The O(N) model, Phys. Rev. D106, 065012 (2022), arXiv:2108.02504 [cond-mat.stat-mech]

Showing first 80 references.