scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers on "Vertex function published in 2022"


Journal ArticleDOI
30 Dec 2022
TL;DR: In this article , Catumba et al. evaluate the three-gluon vertex with one vanishing external momentum within the Curci-Ferrari (CF) model at two-loop order and compare their results to Landau-gauge lattice simulations of the same vertex function for the SU(2) and SU(3) gauge groups in four dimensions.
Abstract: We evaluate the three-gluon vertex with one vanishing external momentum within the Curci-Ferrari (CF) model at two-loop order and compare our results to Landau-gauge lattice simulations of the same vertex function for the SU(2) and SU(3) gauge groups in four dimensions. This extends previous works [J. A. Gracey et al., Phys. Rev. D 100, 034023 (2019); N. Barrios et al., Phys. Rev. D 102, 114016 (2020)] that considered similarly the two-loop ghost and gluon two-point functions as well as the two-loop ghost-antighost-gluon vertex (with vanishing gluon momentum). With the parameters of the model being adjusted by fitting the two-point functions to available lattice data, our evaluation of the three-gluon vertex arises as a pure prediction. We find that two-loop corrections systematically improve the agreement between the model and the lattice data as compared to earlier one-loop calculations, with a better agreement in the SU(3) case as already seen in previous studies. We also analyze the renormalization scheme dependence of our calculation. In all cases, this dependence diminishes when two-loop corrections are included, which is consistent with the perturbative CF paradigm. In addition, we study the low momentum regime of the three-gluon vertex in relation with the possibility of zero crossing. Within the CF model, we show that the leading infrared behavior of the exact vertex is given by the same linear logarithm that arises at one-loop order, multiplied by the all orders cubic ghost dressing function at zero momentum (we provide similar exact results for other vertex functions). We argue that this property remains true within the Faddeev-Popov framework under the assumption that the resummed gluon propagator features a decoupling behavior. This shows that the zero crossing is a property of the exact three-gluon vertex function. Within the CF model, we find however that the scale of the zero crossing is considerably reduced when going from one- to two-loop order. This seems consistent with some recent lattice simulations [G. T. R. Catumba et al., EPJ Web Conf. 258, 02008 (2022)]. Finally, our analysis also allows us to support recent claims about the dominance of the tree-level tensor component [F. Pinto-G\'omez et al., arXiv:2208.01020].

4 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the longitudinal and transverse form factors of the quark-gluon vertex as functions of the incoming and outgoing quark momenta and an angle θ = 2π/3 between them were derived.
Abstract: We present preliminary results on the longitudinal and transverse form factors of the quark-gluon vertex as functions of the incoming and outgoing quark momenta and an angle θ = 2π/3 between them. The expressions for these form factors were previously derived from Slavnov-Taylor identities, gauge covariance and multiplicative renormalizability that firmly constrain the fermion-boson vertex.

2 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors discuss the coupled dynamics of the ghost dressing function and the ghost-gluon vertex through the Schwinger-Dyson equations that they satisfy, and the numerical solution of the resulting coupled system exhibits excellent agreement to lattice data.
Abstract: We discuss the coupled dynamics of the ghost dressing function and the ghost-gluon vertex through the Schwinger-Dyson equations that they satisfy. In order to close the system of equations, we combine recent lattice data for the gluon propagator and an approximate STI-derived Ansatz for the general kinematics three-gluon vertex. The numerical solution of the resulting coupled system exhibits excellent agreement to lattice data, for both the ghost dressing function and the ghost-gluon vertex, and allows the determination of the coupling constant. Next, in the soft gluon limit the full three-gluon vertex appearing in the ghost-gluon equation reduces to a special projection that is tightly constrained by lattice simulations. Specializing the ghost-gluon Schwinger-Dyson equation to this limit provides a nontrivial consistency check on the approximations employed for the three-gluon interaction and shows that the latter has an important quantitative effect on the ghost-gluon vertex. Finally, our results stress the importance of eliminating artifacts when confronting lattice data with continuum predictions.

Posted ContentDOI
12 Jan 2022
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors discuss the coupled dynamics of the ghost dressing function and the ghost-gluon vertex through the Schwinger-Dyson equations that they satisfy, and show that the resulting coupled system exhibits excellent agreement to lattice data.
Abstract: We discuss the coupled dynamics of the ghost dressing function and the ghost-gluon vertex through the Schwinger-Dyson equations that they satisfy. In order to close the system of equations, we combine recent lattice data for the gluon propagator and an approximate STI-derived Ansatz for the general kinematics three-gluon vertex. The numerical solution of the resulting coupled system exhibits excellent agreement to lattice data, for both the ghost dressing function and the ghost-gluon vertex, and allows the determination of the coupling constant. Next, in the soft gluon limit the full three-gluon vertex appearing in the ghost-gluon equation reduces to a special projection that is tightly constrained by lattice simulations. Specializing the ghost-gluon Schwinger-Dyson equation to this limit provides a nontrivial consistency check on the approximations employed for the three-gluon interaction and shows that the latter has an important quantitative effect on the ghost-gluon vertex. Finally, our results stress the importance of eliminating artifacts when confronting lattice data with continuum predictions.