Hadronic vacuum polarization: comparing lattice QCD and data-driven results in systematically improvable ways
Michel Davier, Zoltan Fodor, Antoine Gerardin, Laurent Lellouch,, Bogdan Malaescu, Finn M. Stokes, Kalman K. Szabo, Balint C. Toth, Lukas, Varnhorst, Zhiqing Zhang

TL;DR
This paper introduces a framework to compare and reconcile lattice QCD and data-driven results for hadronic vacuum polarization, revealing that a ~5% modification in the rho peak can align the two approaches across key observables.
Contribution
The paper develops a systematic method to analyze tensions between lattice QCD and data-driven HVP results, enabling potential combination of both approaches through controlled modifications.
Findings
Results can be reconciled by increasing the rho peak contribution by about 5%.
The required modification exceeds current experimental uncertainties on the R-ratio.
The framework accounts for all uncertainties and correlations in the comparison.
Abstract
The precision with which hadronic vacuum polarization (HVP) is obtained determines how accurately important observables, such as the muon anomalous magnetic moment, a_\mu, or the low-energy running of the electromagnetic coupling, \alpha, are predicted. The two most precise approaches for determining HVP are: dispersive relations combined with e+e- to hadrons cross-section data, and lattice QCD. However, the results obtained in these two approaches display significant tensions, whose origins are not understood. Here we present a framework that sheds light on this issue and, if the two approaches can be reconciled, allows them to be combined. Via this framework, we test the hypothesis that the tensions can be explained by modifying the R-ratio in different intervals of center-of-mass energy sqrt(s). As ingredients, we consider observables that have been precisely determined in both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions · High-Energy Particle Collisions Research
