We comment on a recent manuscript "Ether of Orbifolds" by Henry Lamm. In the first version, it was mistakenly claimed that the orbifold lattice Hamiltonian is not gauge invariant, and a quantity $\epsilon_g$, which has nothing to do with a non-existent "gauge violation", was introduced. The scaling of this $\epsilon_g$ was used to claim a huge simulation cost. In fact, $\epsilon_g$ characterizes the shift of the effective lattice spacing -- because, in the orbifold lattice formulation, the lattice is generated dynamically from the vacuum expectation value of the complex matrices. In the second version, the claim about the gauge symmetry was partially corrected, based on our comments. However, $\epsilon_g$ is still mistakenly interpreted as a measure of "departure from SU($N$)", inconsistently with the foundational results by Kaplan, Katz, and Ünsal, and also by Arkani-Hamed, Cohen, and Georgi. This interpretation plays a central role in sustaining the argument introduced in the first version.
We study the duality of lattice Maxwell theory in a modified Villain formulation and employ an ultra-local action with a theta term. Although this action is known to become non-local under Poisson resummation, we show that this non-locality can be removed in the absence of monopoles by incorporating a non-local transformation procedure into the definition of the S-transformation. As a result, the ultra-local action with a theta term exhibits an exact SL(2,Z)-duality. We further analyze the SL(2,Z)-structure of Wilson loops, demonstrating that they transform properly up to a nontrivial phase factor arising from the nontrivial self-linking of magnetic Wilson loops. This effect originates from the non-local transformation procedure in the S-transformation. Remarkably, the resulting SL(2,Z)-structure closely resembles that of non-spin Maxwell theory.
We study how a fluctuating domain wall in three dimensions modifies bulk observables in a gapped phase. We introduce an effective interaction between the wall and the lightest bulk massive mode, and identify the regime in which this description is controlled: nearly on-shell bulk exchange with small momentum along the wall. In this regime, several observables are controlled by a renormalized dimensionless coupling $\lambda$, including the large-$L_z$ correction to the wall free energy and the large-$|x_\perp|$ tail of two-point functions in the presence of the wall. Other observables, such as one-point functions and two-point functions in the nearby-regime, retain non-universal dependence on operator data and on the bulk spectral density. We test the universal kinematic consequences of wall fluctuations, and find good agreement with the predicted rough-wall broadening and nearby Gaussian behavior in Monte Carlo simulations of the 3D Ising model with anti-periodic boundary conditions.
We analyze non-invertible topological interfaces and defects in the two-dimensional compact boson, focusing on the more exotic ones obtained by gauging continuous symmetries with flat connections on a half-space. These include interfaces between mutually irrational radii and T-duality symmetries at arbitrary boson radius. Using the modified Villain discretization on both a Euclidean two-dimensional square lattice and a quantum one-dimensional chain, we show that all these topological interfaces survive discretization and give rise to non-compact edge modes localized at the defect sites. Such non-compact edge modes imply a continuous defect spectrum and an infinite quantum dimension. In the special case of rational radii, we show how the defect action or Hamiltonian can be modified in order to compactify the edge modes and produce more standard defects with finite quantum dimension.
We investigate the interaction dependence of the liquid-gas critical point of symmetric nuclear matter in finite-temperature lattice effective field theory. Building on the pinhole-trace algorithm, we benchmark a first-order perturbative treatment for representative Hamiltonian splittings and then compute the finite-temperature equation of state for a sequence of sign-friendly lattice Hamiltonians ranging from an SU(4)-symmetric interaction to Hamiltonians with physical ${}^{1}S_{0}$ and ${}^{3}S_{1}$ channel dependence and improved leading-order interactions. The finite-temperature analysis is complemented by zero-temperature calculations of the symmetric-matter saturation point and the binding energies of selected nuclei within the same lattice framework. We find that the benchmarked perturbative strategy is quantitatively reliable in the thermodynamic regime studied. Across this Hamiltonian sequence, the refined interactions improve finite-nucleus binding energies and move the zero-temperature saturation point toward the empirical region, while lowering the critical temperature from 15.33(6) MeV to 14.62(20)-14.69(20) MeV. These calculations show that finite-temperature criticality is not fixed by zero-temperature saturation and binding alone, and may serve as a complementary benchmark for future lattice interaction development.
We provide an extended lattice study of the SU(2) gauge theory coupled to one Dirac fermion flavour ($N_{\mathrm{f}} =1$) transforming in the adjoint representation as the continuum limit is approached. This investigation is supplemented by numerical results obtained for the SU(2) gauge theory with two Dirac fermion flavours ($N_{\mathrm{f}} =2$) transforming in the adjoint representation, for which we perform numerical investigations at three values of the lattice spacing. The purpose of our study is to advance the characterisation of the infrared properties of both theories, which previous investigations have concluded to be in the conformal window. For both, we determine the mass spectrum and the anomalous dimension of the fermion condensate using finite-size hyperscaling of the spectrum, mode number analysis of the Dirac operator (for which we improve on our previous proposal) and the ratio of masses of the lightest spin-2 particle over the lightest scalar. All methods provide a consistent picture, with the anomalous dimension of the condensate $\gamma_*$ decreasing significantly as one approaches the continuum limit for the $N_{\mathrm{f}} = 1$ theory towards a value consistent with $\gamma_* = 0.170(6)$, while for $N_{\mathrm{f}} = 2$ the anomalous dimension converges more rapidly with $\beta$ to a value of $\gamma_* = 0.291(9)$. A chiral perturbation theory analysis shows that the infrared behaviour of both theories is incompatible with the breaking of chiral symmetry.
We develop a methodology based on out-of-equilibrium simulations to mitigate topological freezing when approaching the continuum limit of lattice gauge theories. We reduce the autocorrelation of the topological charge employing open boundary conditions, while removing exactly their unphysical effects using a non-equilibrium Monte Carlo approach in which periodic boundary conditions are gradually switched on. We perform a detailed analysis of the computational costs of this strategy in the case of the four-dimensional $\mathrm{SU}(3)$ Yang-Mills theory. After achieving full control of the scaling, we outline a clear strategy to sample topology efficiently in the continuum limit, which we check at lattice spacings as small as $0.045$ fm. We also generalize this approach by designing a customized Stochastic Normalizing Flow for evolutions in the boundary conditions, obtaining superior performances with respect to the purely stochastic non-equilibrium approach, and paving the way for more efficient future flow-based solutions.
We present the first lattice QCD calculation of the next-to-leading order hadronic vacuum polarization contribution to the muon anomalous magnetic moment with sub-percent precision. We employ the time-momentum representation for the space-like kernel, which is combined with the spatially summed vector correlator computed on CLS ensembles with $N_{\mathrm{f}}=2+1$ flavors of $\mathrm{O}(a)$-improved Wilson fermions, covering six lattice spacings between $0.039$ and $0.097\,$fm and a range of pion masses including the physical value. After accounting for finite-size corrections and isospin-breaking effects, we obtain as our final, continuum-extrapolated result $a_\mu^{\mathrm{hvp,\,nlo}}=-101.57(26)_{\mathrm{stat}}(54)_{\mathrm{syst}}\times10^{-11}$. It lies below the estimate provided by the 2025 White Paper of the Muon $(g-2)$ Theory Initiative by $1.4\sigma$ but is two times more precise. It also exhibits a strong tension of $4.6\sigma$ with data-driven evaluations based on hadronic cross section measurements excluding the recent result by CMD-3.
We simulate the thermalization dynamics for minimally truncated SU(2) pure gauge theory on linear plaquette chains with up to 151 plaquettes using IBM quantum computers. We study the time dependence of the entanglement spectrum, Rényi-2 entropy and anti-flatness on small subsystems. The quantum hardware results obtained after error mitigation agree with extrapolated classical simulator results for chains consisting of up to 101 plaquettes. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of local thermalization studies for chaotic quantum systems, such as nonabelian lattice gauge theories, on current noisy quantum computing platforms.
We investigate the pseudoscalar ($\eta_t$) and vector ($\psi_t$) toponium states, as well as the triply-top baryon ($\Omega_{ttt}$), using the QCD sum-rule method. This study was motivated by the recent observation of a pseudoscalar enhancement near the $t\bar{t}$ threshold, reported by the CMS and ATLAS collaborations with a statistical significance exceeding $5\sigma$. In the calculations, we consider both the perturbative and nonperturbative contributions, with the nonperturbative operators taken into account up to dimension eight. The results obtained for the pseudoscalar toponium provide a theoretical estimate that is consistent with the near-threshold events observed in recent experimental studies. The calculated negative binding energy for both the pseudoscalar and vector toponium states reflects the strong correlation within the $t\bar{t}$ system and can be interpreted as $t\bar{t}$ bound states, while the calculated central mass for the $\Omega_{ttt}$ slightly exceeds the central value of the sum of the constituent top-quark masses. The results of this study can provide a precise theoretical guide for future experimental investigations of these states, which are composed entirely of top quarks, at high-energy colliders such as the LHC and future facilities like the FCC.
The rare decays $\eta^{(\prime)}\to\ell^+\ell^-$, $\ell\in\{e,\mu\}$, are highly suppressed in the Standard Model, both by their chirality structure and the required loop attaching the lepton line to the $\eta^{(\prime)}\to\gamma^*\gamma^*$ matrix element. The latter is described by a single scalar function, the transition form factor, which has recently been studied in great detail for $\eta^{(\prime)}$ in the context of the pseudoscalar-pole contributions to hadronic light-by-light scattering in the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. Based on these results, we evaluate the corresponding prediction for the $\eta^{(\prime)}$ dilepton decays, supplemented by an improved evaluation of the asymptotic contributions including pseudoscalar mass effects. In particular, the dispersive representation for the $\eta^{(\prime)}$ transition form factors allows us, for the first time, to perform a robust evaluation of the imaginary parts due to subleading channels besides the dominant two-photon cut. Our final results are $\text{Br}[\eta\to e^+e^-]=5.37(4)(2)[4]\times 10^{-9}$, $\text{Br}[\eta\to \mu^+\mu^-]=4.54(4)(2)[4]\times 10^{-6}$, $\text{Br}[\eta'\to e^+e^-]=1.80(2)(3)[3]\times 10^{-10}$, and $\text{Br}[\eta'\to \mu^+\mu^-]=1.22(2)(2)[3]\times 10^{-7}$, where the errors refer to the uncertainty in the normalized branching fraction, the one propagated from $\text{Br}[\eta^{(\prime)}\to\gamma\gamma]$, and the total uncertainty, respectively. The branching fraction for $\eta\to\mu^+\mu^-$ exhibits a mild $1.6\sigma$ tension with experiment, and we explore the bounds that can be derived on physics beyond the Standard Model.