Lattice QCD Determination of $g_A$
Andr\'e Walker-Loud, Evan Berkowitz, David A. Brantley, Arjun Gambhir,, Pavlos Vranas, Chris Bouchard, Chia Cheng Chang, M. A. Clark, Nicolas Garron,, B\'alint Jo\'o, Thorsten Kurth, Henry Monge-Camacho, Amy Nicholson,, Christopher J. Monahan, Kostas Orginos, Enrico Rinaldi

TL;DR
This paper reports a high-precision lattice QCD calculation of the nucleon axial coupling $g_A$, overcoming major computational challenges with innovative methods and GPU acceleration, with implications for nuclear physics and future improvements.
Contribution
It introduces an unconventional computation approach and GPU-accelerated code to precisely determine $g_A$, addressing longstanding challenges in lattice QCD calculations.
Findings
$g_A$ determined with 1% precision
Systematic uncertainties fully controlled
Preliminary results suggest sub-percent precision achievable
Abstract
The nucleon axial coupling, , is a fundamental property of protons and neutrons, dictating the strength with which the weak axial current of the Standard Model couples to nucleons, and hence, the lifetime of a free neutron. The prominence of in nuclear physics has made it a benchmark quantity with which to calibrate lattice QCD calculations of nucleon structure and more complex calculations of electroweak matrix elements in one and few nucleon systems. There were a number of significant challenges in determining , notably the notorious exponentially-bad signal-to-noise problem and the requirement for hundreds of thousands of stochastic samples, that rendered this goal more difficult to obtain than originally thought. I will describe the use of an unconventional computation method, coupled with "ludicrously'" fast GPU code, access to publicly available lattice QCD…
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