TY - JOUR
T1 - Strong coupling from hadronic τ decays: A critical appraisal
AU - Boito, Diogo
AU - Golterman, Maarten
AU - Maltman, Kim
AU - Peris, Santiago
PY - 2017/2/22
Y1 - 2017/2/22
N2 - © 2017 American Physical Society. Several different analysis methods have been developed to determine the strong coupling via finite-energy sum-rule analyses of hadronic τ decay data. While most methods agree on the existence of the well-known ambiguity in the choice of a resummation scheme due to the slow convergence of QCD perturbation theory at the τ mass, there is an ongoing controversy over how to deal properly with nonperturbative effects. These are small, but not negligible, and include quark-hadron "duality violations" (i.e., resonance effects) which are not described by the operator product expansion (OPE). In one approach, an attempt is made to suppress duality violations enough that they might become negligible. The number of OPE parameters to be fit, however, then exceeds the number of available sum rules, necessitating an uncontrolled OPE truncation, in which a number of higher-dimension OPE contributions in general present in QCD are set to zero by hand. In the second approach, truncation of the OPE is avoided by construction, and duality violations are taken into account explicitly, using a physically motivated model. In this article, we provide a critical appraisal of a recent analysis employing the first approach and demonstrate that it fails to properly account for nonperturbative effects, making the resulting determination of the strong coupling unreliable. The second approach, in contrast, passes all self-consistency tests, and provides a competitive determination of the strong coupling from τ decays.
AB - © 2017 American Physical Society. Several different analysis methods have been developed to determine the strong coupling via finite-energy sum-rule analyses of hadronic τ decay data. While most methods agree on the existence of the well-known ambiguity in the choice of a resummation scheme due to the slow convergence of QCD perturbation theory at the τ mass, there is an ongoing controversy over how to deal properly with nonperturbative effects. These are small, but not negligible, and include quark-hadron "duality violations" (i.e., resonance effects) which are not described by the operator product expansion (OPE). In one approach, an attempt is made to suppress duality violations enough that they might become negligible. The number of OPE parameters to be fit, however, then exceeds the number of available sum rules, necessitating an uncontrolled OPE truncation, in which a number of higher-dimension OPE contributions in general present in QCD are set to zero by hand. In the second approach, truncation of the OPE is avoided by construction, and duality violations are taken into account explicitly, using a physically motivated model. In this article, we provide a critical appraisal of a recent analysis employing the first approach and demonstrate that it fails to properly account for nonperturbative effects, making the resulting determination of the strong coupling unreliable. The second approach, in contrast, passes all self-consistency tests, and provides a competitive determination of the strong coupling from τ decays.
U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevD.95.034024
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevD.95.034024
M3 - Article
SN - 2470-0010
VL - 95
JO - Physical Review D
JF - Physical Review D
IS - 3
M1 - 034024
ER -