Szabolcs Borsanyi
University of Wuppertal
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Szabolcs Borsanyi.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2010
Szabolcs Borsanyi; G. Endrődi; Zoltan Fodor; A. Jakovac; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Claudia Ratti; Kalman Szabo
The present paper concludes our investigation on the QCD equation of state with 2 + 1 staggered flavors and one-link stout improvement. We extend our previous study [JHEP01 (2006) 089] by choosing even finer lattices. Lattices with Nt=6, 8 and 10 are used, and the continuum limit is approached by checking the results at Nt= 12. A Symanzik improved gauge and a stout-link improved staggered fermion action is utilized. We use physical quark masses, that is, for the lightest staggered pions and kaons we fix the mπ/fK and mK/fK ratios to their experimental values. The pressure, the interaction measure, the energy and entropy density and the speed of sound are presented as functions of the temperature in the range 100 ... 1000MeV. We give estimates for the pion mass dependence and for the contribution of the charm quark. We compare our data to the equation of state obtained by the “hotQCD” collaboration.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2010
Szabolcs Borsanyi; Zoltan Fodor; Christian Hoelbling; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Claudia Ratti; Kalman Szabo
The present paper concludes our investigations on the QCD cross-over transition temperatures with 2+1 staggered flavours and one-link stout improvement. We extend our previous two studies [Phys. Lett. B643 (2006) 46, JHEP 0906:088 (2009)] by choosing even finer lattices (Nt = 16) and we work again with physical quark masses. The new results on this broad cross-over are in complete agreement with our earlier ones. We compare our findings with the published results of the hotQCD collaboration. All these results are confronted with the predictions of the Hadron Resonance Gas model and Chiral Perturbation Theory for temperatures below the transition region. Our results can be reproduced by using the physical spectrum in these analytic calculations. The findings of the hotQCD collaboration can be recovered by using a distorted spectrum which takes into account lattice discretization artifacts and heavier than physical quark masses. This analysis provides a simple explanation for the observed discrepancy in the transition temperatures between our and the hotQCD collaborations.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2012
Szabolcs Borsanyi; S. Durr; Zoltan Fodor; C. Hoelbling; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; T. Kurth; Laurent Lellouch; Thomas Lippert; Craig McNeile; Kalman Szabo
A bstractScale setting is of central importance in lattice QCD. It is required to predict dimensional quantities in physical units. Moreover, it determines the relative lattice spacings of computations performed at different values of the bare coupling, and this is needed for extrapolating results into the continuum. Thus, we calculate a new quantity, w0, for setting the scale in lattice QCD, which is based on the Wilson flow like the scale t0 (M. Luscher, JHEP 08 (2010) 071). It is cheap and straightforward to implement and compute. In particular, it does not involve the delicate fitting of correlation functions at asymptotic times. It typically can be determined on the few per-mil level. We compute its continuum extrapolated value in 2 + 1-flavor QCD for physical and non-physical pion and kaon masses, to allow for mass-independent scale setting even away from the physical mass point. We demonstrate its robustness by computing it with two very different actions (one of them with staggered, the other with Wilson fermions) and by showing that the results agree for physical quark masses in the continuum limit.
Nature | 2016
Szabolcs Borsanyi; Zoltan Fodor; J. Guenther; K.-H. Kampert; Sandor D. Katz; T. Kawanai; T. Kovács; S. W. Mages; A. Pasztor; F. Pittler; Javier Redondo; Andreas Ringwald; K. K. Szabo
Unlike the electroweak sector of the standard model of particle physics, quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is surprisingly symmetric under time reversal. As there is no obvious reason for QCD being so symmetric, this phenomenon poses a theoretical problem, often referred to as the strong CP problem. The most attractive solution for this requires the existence of a new particle, the axion—a promising dark-matter candidate. Here we determine the axion mass using lattice QCD, assuming that these particles are the dominant component of dark matter. The key quantities of the calculation are the equation of state of the Universe and the temperature dependence of the topological susceptibility of QCD, a quantity that is notoriously difficult to calculate, especially in the most relevant high-temperature region (up to several gigaelectronvolts). But by splitting the vacuum into different sectors and re-defining the fermionic determinants, its controlled calculation becomes feasible. Thus, our twofold prediction helps most cosmological calculations to describe the evolution of the early Universe by using the equation of state, and may be decisive for guiding experiments looking for dark-matter axions. In the next couple of years, it should be possible to confirm or rule out post-inflation axions experimentally, depending on whether the axion mass is found to be as predicted here. Alternatively, in a pre-inflation scenario, our calculation determines the universal axionic angle that corresponds to the initial condition of our Universe.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Rene Bellwied; Szabolcs Borsanyi; Zoltan Fodor; Sandor D. Katz; Claudia Ratti
We present possible indications for flavor separation during the QCD crossover transition based on continuum extrapolated lattice QCD calculations of higher order susceptibilities. We base our findings on flavor-specific quantities in the light and strange quark sector. We propose a possible experimental verification of our prediction, based on the measurement of higher order moments of identified particle multiplicities. Since all our calculations are performed at zero baryochemical potential, these results are of particular relevance for the heavy-ion program at the LHC.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Szabolcs Borsanyi; Z. Fodor; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Claudia Ratti; Kalman Szabo
We present our results for ratios of higher order fluctuations of electric charge as functions of the temperature. These results are obtained in a system of 2+1 quark flavors at physical quark masses and continuum extrapolated. We compare them to preliminary data on higher order moments of the net electric charge distribution from the STAR collaboration. This allows us to determine the freeze-out temperature and chemical potential from first principles. We also show continuum-extrapolated results for ratios of higher order fluctuations of baryon number. These will allow us to test the consistency of the approach, by comparing them to the corresponding experimental data (once they become available) and thus, extracting the freeze-out parameters in an independent way.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Szabolcs Borsanyi; Z. Fodor; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Claudia Ratti; K. K. Szabo
Recent results for moments of multiplicity distributions of net protons and net-electric charge from the STAR Collaboration are compared to lattice QCD results for higher order fluctuations of baryon number and electric charge by the Wuppertal-Budapest Collaboration, with the purpose of extracting the freeze-out temperature and chemical potential. All lattice simulations are performed for a system of 2+1 dynamical quark flavors, at the physical mass for light and strange quarks; all results are continuum extrapolated. We show that it is possible to extract an upper value for the freeze-out temperature, as well as precise baryochemical potential values corresponding to the four highest collision energies of the experimental beam energy scan. Consistency between the freeze-out parameters obtained from baryon number and electric charge fluctuations is found. The freeze-out chemical potentials are now in agreement with the statistical hadronization model.
Physical Review D | 2015
Rene Bellwied; Szabolcs Borsanyi; Z. Fodor; Sandor D. Katz; A. Pasztor; C. Ratti; K. K. Szabo
We calculate second- and fourth-order cumulants of conserved charges in a temperature range stretching from the QCD transition region towards the realm of (resummed) perturbation theory. We perform lattice simulations with staggered quarks; the continuum extrapolation is based on
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2012
Szabolcs Borsanyi; S. Durr; Zoltan Fodor; C. Hoelbling; Sandor D. Katz; Stefan Krieg; Daniel Nogradi; Kalman Szabo; B. C. Toth; Norbert Trombitás
N_t=10\dots24
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2014
Szabolcs Borsanyi; Stephan Dürr; Zoltan Fodor; C. Hoelbling; Sandor D. Katz; S. Krieg; Simon Mages; Daniel Nogradi; Attila Pasztor; A. Schäfer; Kalman Szabo; B. C. Toth; Norbert Trombitás
in the crossover-region and