Difference between revisions of "Pion and Kaon Structure Functions"

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== Transverse Charge Distribution of Hadrons ==
+
== Parton Distributions in Pion and Kaon ==
  
This work is done by the Nuclear Physics Group at the CUA, together with [http://www.phys.washington.edu/~miller/ Dr. Gerald A. Miller], from the University of Washington.
+
The structure functions in terms of sea quarks and gluons are expected to be different for pions, kaons, and nucleons and to provide basic information about their origin of mass.
  
According to [http://arxiv.org/abs/1010.3629 Siddharth Venkat, 2010], having the form factor F(Q^2) of a particle it is possible to simplify the calculation of its two-dimensional transverse density using the finite radius approximation.
+
Experimental data are sparse. As a result, there has been persistent doubt about the behavior of the pion's valence quark structure function at large Bjorken-x and virtually nothing is known about the contribution of sea quarks and gluons. The Electron-Ion Collider with an acceptance optimized for forward physics has the potential for accessing pion and kaon structure functions over a large kinematic region through the Sullivan process. This would allow for measurements testing if the origin of mass is encoded in the differences of gluons in pions, kaons, and nucleons, and measurements that could serve as a test of assumptions used in the extraction of structure functions and the pion and kaon form factors.
  
In this work we are going to calculate the transverse charge distribution of Pions. As a first step for this calculation, we are reproducing the Proton charge distribution from [http://arxiv.org/abs/1010.3629 Siddharth Venkat, 2010].
+
In this work we are going to make projections for pion and kaon structure functions from the Sullivan process with flexible choices of x and Q2 bins, and evaluate the uncertainties and potential to constrain, e.g. the gluon PDFs.
  
The equation:
+
== Experiments ==
<math>
 
\frac{1}{2}
 
</math>
 
  
== Charged Pion Transverse Charge Distribution ==
+
* [https://misportal.jlab.org/mis/physics/experiments/viewProposal.cfm?paperId=866 TDIS Pion (JLab 12 GeV, valence)]
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
* [https://misportal.jlab.org/mis/physics/experiments/viewProposal.cfm?paperId=933 TDIS Kaon (JLab 12 GeV, valence)]
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Pion_Q2F1.png|thumb|center|350px|Pion form factor.]]
 
|
 
|}
 
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
* Electron-Ion Collider
|-
+
::* [https://drive.google.com/drive/u/1/folders/1BRQJmeSbVjSoCEOaS_ZMXhUszk7wtIfK Plots and updates from Richard's Google Drive]
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Pion_F1_RFit.png|thumb|center|350px|Fitting of the pion form factor for low Q^2, for finding its mean radius.]]
 
|
 
|}
 
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
== Workshops and Publications ==
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_Fitting.png|thumb|center|350px|Pion form factor fitting.]]
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_Fitting_q2f.png|thumb|center|350px|Pion form factor fitting.]]
 
|}
 
  
 +
* [https://arxiv.org/pdf/1907.08218.pdf A.C. Aguilar et al., Eur. Phys. J. A (2019) in press]
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
* [https://www.jlab.org/conferences/pieic18/ Pion and Kaon Structure Function at an Electron-Ion Collider, Workshop at CUA 2018]
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_MultiFit.png|thumb|center|350px|Multi fit of the pion form factor.]]
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_MultiFitQ2.png|thumb|center|350px|Multi fit of the pion form factor.]]
 
|}
 
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="100%"
+
* [http://www.phy.anl.gov/theory/pieic2017/index.html Pion and Kaon Structure Function at an Electron-Ion Collider, Workshop at ANL 2017]
|-
 
| style="width: 33%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_MultiFit_par0.png|thumb|center|350px|Multi fit - distribution of fitted parameter #0.]]
 
| style="width: 34%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_MultiFit_par1.png|thumb|center|350px|Multi fit - distribution of fitted parameter #1.]]
 
| style="width: 33%;" | [[File:Pion_FF_MultiFit_par2.png|thumb|center|350px|Multi fit - distribution of fitted parameter #2.]]
 
|}
 
  
== Proton Transverse Charge Distribution ==
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== Simulation Codes ==
  
This section is a reproduction of the calculation done in [Siddharth Venkat, 2010], using experimental data from ... (insert references here!)
+
* [https://github.com/JeffersonLab/EIC_mesonMC GitHub: Pion Structure Functions (Richard Trotta)]
  
In the case of protons, the measured form factors are G_e and G_m. They are linear combinations of F1 and F2, according to the following equations:
+
== Literature ==
  
(insert equations)
+
* J.F. Owens, Phys. Rev. D, Vol. 30, Issue 5 (1984), 943.
  
The experimental data and the fit given by [Siddharth Venkat, 2010] for G_e and G_m are shown in the following figures:
+
* M. Glueck, E. Reya, A. Vogt, Z. Phys. C 53 (1992), 651.
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
* M. Alberg, E. M. Henley, Phys. Lett. B611 (2005) 111.
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_ge.png|thumb|center|350px|Proton form factor G_e. Experimental data from XX and fit from [Siddharth Venkat, 2010].]]
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_gm.png|thumb|center|350px|Proton form factor G_m. Experimental data from XX and fit from [Siddharth Venkat, 2010].]]
 
|}
 
  
These G_e and G_m form factors can be re-written in the F_1 and F_2 form factors. The results are shown in the following figures:
+
* M. Alberg, J. Tibbals, Phys. Lett. B709 (2012) 370.
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
[http://www.vsl.cua.edu/cua_phy/images/6/6a/Structure-Functions-v2.pdf some slides]
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_Q4F1.png|thumb|center|350px|Proton form factor F_1(Q^2).]]
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_Q4F2.png|thumb|center|350px|Proton form factor F_2(Q^2).]]
 
|}
 
  
As the charge distribution are Fourier transforms of form factors, one can extract the charge distribution by performing this calculation. The first step is to calculate the mean radius of the proton. It is done by fitting the form factors in the limit of low Q^2.
+
* [[MainPage:Nuclear:EICGlobalStudies|EIC Global Studies]] page.</font>
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
== PDF Fitters ==
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_F1_Rfit.png|thumb|center|350px|Mean radius R_1 of the proton, related to the form factor F_1. Value fitted in the paper was 3.29 fm.]]
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_F2_Rfit.png|thumb|center|350px|Mean radius R_2 of the proton, related to the form factor F_2. Value fitted in the paper was 3.62 fm.]]
 
|}
 
  
Finally, the charge distribution can be calculated by a truncated expansion in Bessel Functions. The truncation is required by the limitation in knowledge of the form factor with Q^2. The following figure shows the calculated charge distribution from the fitted function of G_e and G_m given in [Siddharth Venkat, 2010] and also R_1 and R_2 of this paper.
+
[http://hepdata.cedar.ac.uk/pdf/pdf3.html Durham Reaction Database PDF Plotter]
  
{| border="0" style="text-align:center;" width="70%"
+
[https://www.herafitter.org/HERAFitter/ HERA Fitter]
|-
 
| style="width: 50%;" | [[File:Proton_ro_ch-F1.png|thumb|center|350px|Calculated transverse proton distribution from .]]
 
| style="width: 50%;" |
 
|}
 
 
 
The next step of this calculation is the estimation of uncertainties. There are two main sources of uncertainties:
 
* Form factor uncertainties, from experimental data
 
* Incompleteness error, from the truncation of the expansion (limitation of the knowledge of form factors for high Q^2).
 

Latest revision as of 11:18, 4 October 2019


⇐ Back to the Main_Page


Parton Distributions in Pion and Kaon

The structure functions in terms of sea quarks and gluons are expected to be different for pions, kaons, and nucleons and to provide basic information about their origin of mass.

Experimental data are sparse. As a result, there has been persistent doubt about the behavior of the pion's valence quark structure function at large Bjorken-x and virtually nothing is known about the contribution of sea quarks and gluons. The Electron-Ion Collider with an acceptance optimized for forward physics has the potential for accessing pion and kaon structure functions over a large kinematic region through the Sullivan process. This would allow for measurements testing if the origin of mass is encoded in the differences of gluons in pions, kaons, and nucleons, and measurements that could serve as a test of assumptions used in the extraction of structure functions and the pion and kaon form factors.

In this work we are going to make projections for pion and kaon structure functions from the Sullivan process with flexible choices of x and Q2 bins, and evaluate the uncertainties and potential to constrain, e.g. the gluon PDFs.

Experiments

  • Electron-Ion Collider

Workshops and Publications

Simulation Codes

Literature

  • J.F. Owens, Phys. Rev. D, Vol. 30, Issue 5 (1984), 943.
  • M. Glueck, E. Reya, A. Vogt, Z. Phys. C 53 (1992), 651.
  • M. Alberg, E. M. Henley, Phys. Lett. B611 (2005) 111.
  • M. Alberg, J. Tibbals, Phys. Lett. B709 (2012) 370.

some slides

PDF Fitters

Durham Reaction Database PDF Plotter

HERA Fitter