An accurate calculation of the nucleon axial charge with lattice QCD
Evan Berkowitz, David Brantley, Chris Bouchard, Chia Cheng Chang, M., A. Clark, Nicholas Garron, Balint Joo, Thorsten Kurth, Chris Monahan, Henry, Monge-Camacho, Amy Nicholson, Kostas Orginos, Enrico Rinaldi, Pavlos Vranas,, Andre Walker-Loud

TL;DR
This paper presents a precise lattice QCD calculation of the nucleon axial charge, achieving a 2.6% total uncertainty by controlling various systematic effects across multiple pion masses and lattice spacings.
Contribution
The study introduces a new strategy based on the Feynman-Hellmann Theorem for calculating $g_A$, reducing statistical errors and systematic uncertainties in lattice QCD.
Findings
Final $g_A$ value: 1.278(21)(26)
Controlled excited state, continuum, volume, and chiral extrapolations
Achieved 2.6% total uncertainty in $g_A$
Abstract
We report on a lattice QCD calculation of the nucleon axial charge, , using M\"{o}bius Domain-Wall fermions solved on the dynamical HISQ ensembles after they are smeared using the gradient-flow algorithm. The calculation is performed with three pion masses, MeV. Three lattice spacings ( fm) are used with the heaviest pion mass, while the coarsest two spacings are used on the middle pion mass and only the coarsest spacing is used with the near physical pion mass. On the MeV, fm point, a dedicated volume study is performed with . Using a new strategy motivated by the Feynman-Hellmann Theorem, we achieve a precise determination of with relatively low statistics, and demonstrable control over the excited state, continuum, infinite volume and chiral…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research
