- #36
ohwilleke
Gold Member
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Exactly! I'm really not trying to ask anything more profound than that.Reggid said:While everything being said in this thread about the issues with the definition of quark masses, different renormalizaton schemes, confinement, etc... is true, I still don't see why it was brought up in the first place and what it has to do with the OP question.
The question was simply
so if we make this a bit more precise one could say:
The PDG gives here ( https://pdg.lbl.gov/2022/reviews/rpp2022-rev-quark-masses.pdf ) an estimate for the strange quark mass from lattice QCD in the MSbar scheme at a renormalization scale of ##\mu=2\,\rm{GeV}## in a ##N_L = 4## flavor scheme as
##\bar{m}_s(\mu=2\,\rm{GeV}) = (93.1 \pm 0.6)\,rm{MeV}## (Eq. 60.5 on page 5)
What can be done not on the theory side, but instead on the experimental side to bring that ##\pm 0.6\,\rm{MeV}## down? (There are other methods than lattice QCD to determine light quark masses, but the equivalent question can be asked for them too)
This seems a well-posed question to me that should be answerable (just not by me, because I simply don't know the answer).
I don't know the answer, and I suspect contrary to post #26 that more precise hadron mass measurements wouldn't help much for light quark masses since so many hadrons with only light quarks (u, d, s) already have extremely precise mass measurements.