pith. sign in

arxiv: 1506.00361 · v1 · pith:V7OPVLAJnew · submitted 2015-06-01 · ✦ hep-lat · hep-ph

The chromomagnetic operator on the lattice

classification ✦ hep-lat hep-ph
keywords chromomagneticlatticeoperatorbeendimensionalgaugemixingnon-perturbatively
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

We present our study of the renormalization of the chromomagnetic operator,O(CM), which appears in the effective Hamiltonian describing Delta S = 1 transitions in and beyond the Standard Model. We have computed, perturbatively to one-loop, the relevant Green's functions with two (quark-quark) and three (quark-quark-gluon) external fields, at nonzero quark masses, using both the lattice and dimensional regularizations. The perturbative computation on the lattice is carried out using the maximally twisted-mass action for the fermions, while for the gluons we employed the Symanzik improved gauge action for different sets of values of the Symanzik coefficients. We have identified all the operators which can possibly mix with O(CM), including lower dimensional and non gauge invariant operators, and we have calculated those elements of the mixing matrix which are relevant for the renormalization of O(CM). We have also performed numerical lattice calculations to determine non-perturbatively the mixings of the chromomagnetic operator with lower dimensional operators, through proper renormalization conditions. For the first time the 1/a**2-divergent mixing of the chromomagnetic operator with the scalar density has been determined non-perturbatively with high precision. Moreover, the 1/a-divergent mixing with the pseudoscalar density, due to the breaking of parity within the twisted-mass regularization of QCD, has been calculated non-perturbatively and found to be smaller than its one-loop perturbative estimate. The QCD simulations have been carried out using the gauge configurations produced by the European Twisted Mass Collaboration with Nf = 2 + 1 + 1 dynamical quarks, which include in the sea, besides two light mass degenerate quarks, also the strange and charm quarks with masses close to their physical values.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

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