1 / 34

Precise predictions of low-energy QCD and their check by the DIRAC experiment

L. Nemenov 20 January 2006. Precise predictions of low-energy QCD and their check by the DIRAC experiment. 99th Session of the JINR Scientific Council 19–20 January 2006. L. Nemenov 20 January 2006. Outline. High-energy and low-energy QCD Precise predictions of low-energy QCD

chiara
Download Presentation

Precise predictions of low-energy QCD and their check by the DIRAC experiment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. L. Nemenov20 January 2006 Precise predictions of low-energy QCD and their check by the DIRAC experiment 99th Session of the JINR Scientific Council 19–20 January 2006

  2. L. Nemenov20 January 2006 Outline • High-energy and low-energy QCD • Precise predictions of low-energy QCD • Experimental check of low-energy QCD predictions • First lifetime measurement of the π+π–-atom • The new experiment on the investigation of π+π–-atom and observation of πK-atoms at PS CERN • Potentials of the DIRAC setup at SPS CERN, GSI CERN and J-PARC

  3. DIRAC collaboration75 Physicists from 18 Institutes

  4. Theoretical motivation Standard Model Q>> Q<< QED QFD LOW energy QCD HIGH energy Spontaneous chiral symmetry breaking (1967 – Weinberg) perturbative QCD QCD Lagrangian in presence of quark masses: ℒQCD(q,g) = ℒsym+ ℒbreak-sym • high energy (small distance) • “weak” interaction (asymptotic freedom) • expansion in coupling • low energy (large distance) • strong interaction (confinement) • expansion in momentum & mass ℒeff( ,K,) = ℒsym+ ℒbreak-sym ℒsym M, for large Q, depends only on: M, for small Q, depends on both: ℒsymand ℒbreak-sym and q-condensate At low energies, QCD is replaced by an effective quantum field theory (ChPT) formulated in terms of asymptotically observable fields like , K,  1979 – Weinberg 1984 – Gasser & Leutwyler

  5. ChPT predictions for ℒ(6) ℒ(4) ℒ(2) ℒ(2) + + p4 p6 p2 p2 ℒ(2) ℒ(2) ℒ(2) ℒ(2) ℒ(2) + + p6 p4 Tree Two loops One loop In ChPT effective Lagrangian ℒeff is constructed as an expansion in powers of external momenta and of quark masses ℒeff = ℒ(2) + ℒ(4) + ℒ(6) + … 1966Weinberg (tree):ℒ(2)a0 -a2= 0.20 a0= 0.159 a2=-0.045 1984Gasser-Leutwyler (1-loop): ℒ(4) a0 - a2= 0.25 ± 0.01 a0= 0.203 a2=-0.043 1995Knecht et al. (2-loop): ℒ(6)Generalized ChPT 1996Bijnens et al. (2-loop): ℒ(6)a0 - a2= 0.258 ± (<3%)a0= 0.217 a2=-0.042 2001Colangelo et al. (& Roy): ℒ(6)a0 - a2= 0.265 ± 0.004(1.5%)a0= 0.220 a2=-0.044

  6. Dark ellipse Roy eqs. + ChPT Green ellipse  Roy eqs. + ChPT + some constants from Lattice calculation (MILC Collaboration) [1] Colangelo, Gasser and Leutwyler, 2001. [2] Truong and Willey, 1989; Moussallam, 1999; Donoghue, Gasser and Leutwyler, 1990; Ynduráin 2003; Ananthanarayan et al. 2004. [3] MILC Collaboration, 2004.

  7.  scattering and quark condensate (a0 – a2)exp > (a0–a2)th (a0 – a2)exp < (a0–a2)th (a0 – a2)exp = (a0–a2)th In standard ChPT, quark condensate is LARGE: The linear term provides the dominant contribution to the  mass expansion: r = 25.7 ± 2.6 Gasser and Leutwyler, 1985 In Generalized ChPT [1, 2] quark condensatecan be SMALL • . N.H. Fuchs, H. Sazdjian and J. Stern (1991) • . M. Knecht et al. (1995) where B and A are terms of the same order No explanation exist

  8. ππ scattering lengths Presentlow energy QCD predictions: Results from E865/BNL: K →π+πe+ve(Ke4) S.Pislaket al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 87 (2001) 221801using Royeqs. using Royeqs.and ChPT constraints a2=fChPT(a0) First result: L. Rosseletet al., Phys. Rev. D15(1977) 574 Results from NA48/2: K+→π0π0π+ DIRACcurrent results,2001data DIRACexpected results,2001–2003 data Upgraded DIRAC

  9. π+ π0 π0 π Theoretical limits 1. A2πtime of life H. Jalloul, H.Sazdjian 1998 M.A. Ivanov et al. 1998 A. Gashi et al. 2002 J. Gasser et al. 2001 Current limit for accuracy in scattering lengths measurement from the A2π lifetime 2. A2π interaction with matter L.Afanasyev, G.Baur, T.Heim, K.Hencken, Z.Halabuka, A.Kotsinyan, S.Mrowczynski,C.Santamarina, M.Schumann, A.Tarasov, D.Trautmann, O.Voskresenskaya fromBasel, JINRandCERN This value will be reduced by a factor of 2 Current limit for accuracy in scattering lengths measurements due to accuracy in Pbr(τ)

  10. K+ π0 K0 π Theoretical limits AK+π- and AK+π-time of life J. Schweizer (2004)

  11. Production of pionium Coulomb pairs.They are produced in one proto nucleus collision from fragmentation or short lived resonances and exhibit Coulomb interaction in the final state Non-Coulomb pairs.They are produced in one proton nucleus collision. At least one pion originates from a long lived resonance. No Coulomb interaction in the final state Accidental pairs.They are produced in two independent proton nucleus collision. They do not exhibit Coulomb interaction in the final state Atoms are Coulomb bound state of two pions produced in one proton-nucleus collision Background processes:

  12. Method of A2 observation and lifetime measurement L. Nemenov, Sov. J. Nucl. Phys. (1985) (A2π) too small to be measured directly e.m. interaction of A2π in the target A2π  π+π Q < 3MeV/c E+ E lab < 2.5 mrad “atomic pairs” • Coulombfrom short-lived sources • non-Coulombfrom long-lived sources “free pairs” First observation of A2πhave been done by the group from JINR, SINP MSU and IHEP at U-70 Protvino Afanasyev L.G. et al., Phys.Lett.B, 1993.

  13. Break-up probability Solution of the transport equations provides one-to-one dependenceof the measured break-up probability (Pbr) on pionium lifetime τ All targets have the same thickness in radiation lengths 6.7*10-3 X0 There is an optimal target material for a given lifetime The detailed knowledge of the cross sections (Afanasyev&Tarasov; Trautmann et al) (Born and Glauber approach) together with the accurate description of atom interaction dynamics (including density matrix formalism) permits us to know the curves within1%.

  14. Energy splitting 1/τ=Wann~ (a0 – a2)2 Annihilation: A2  00 En≡ Ens– Enp En ≈ En + En vac s E2 =  0.107 eV from QED calculations vac En~ 2a0 + a2 E2≈  0.45 eV numerical estimated value from ChPT a0 = 0.220 ± 0.005 a2 =  0.0444 ± 0.0010 (2001)G. Colangelo, J. Gasser and H. Leutwyler s s  E2 ≈  0.56 eV Energy Splitting between np - nsstates in A2 atom For n = 2 (1979)A. Karimkhodzhaev and R. Faustov(1999) A. Gashi et al. (1983)G. Austen and J. de Swart(2000)D. Eiras and J. Soto (1986) G. Efimov et al. Measurement of τ and E allows one to obtain a0 and a2 separately

  15. Metastable atoms +   1s = 2.9 × 10 15 s , 1s = 1.7 × 10 3 cm 2s = 2.3 × 10 14 s , 2s = 1.4 × 10 2 cm 2p = 1.17 × 10 11 s , 2p = 7 cm 3p  23 cm 4p  54 cm External beam is a metastable atom small angle  * A2 For pA = 5.6 GeV/c and  = 20 p Probabilities of the A2π breakup (Br) and yields of the long-lived states for different targets provided the maximum yield of summed population of the long-lived states:Σ(l ≥1)

  16. DIRAC set-up absorber 1 m vacuum target vacuum DC VH HH magnet MSGC SFD IH negative T2 C PSh Mu T1 positive Setup features: angle to proton beam  = 5.7º ± 1º channel aperture  = 1.2·10-3sr dipole magnet B=1.65 T, BL=2.2 Tm momentum range 1.2 p  8 GeV/c momentum resolution p/p ≈ 3·10 -3 resolution on relative momentum Qx ≈ Qy ≤ 0.5 MeV/c, and QL ≈ 0.5 MeV/c 19º

  17. Atomic pairs

  18. Lifetime of Pionium Result from DIRAC: ChPT prediction:

  19. DIRACanalysis Results for the lifetime: Result for scattering lengths: Improvements with full statistics as in the project

  20. Finite-size effects CF(p-p-) arbitrary normalization Simulation vs fit of DIRAC p-p-CF simulation Nw(pp-) = 19.2% fit result Nw(pp-) = 21±7% Þ good description of  pairs by UrQMD In π+πsystem finite-size effect induces shift in Pbr • UrQMD simulation Nw(π+π) = 15% ÞdPbr ~ 2% Þdt ~ 5% • upper limit at 1 of p-p-fit Nw (π+π)= 20% ÞdPbr ~ 3% Þdt ~ 7.5% Þ Systematic shift in t measurement from finite-size effect < 10% i.e. less then present DIRAC statistical error in t. Expected shift with multi-layer target in future DIRAC 5 times less

  21. What new will be known ifK scattering length will be measured? The measurement of s-wave πK scattering length would test our understanding of chiral SU(3)L SU(3)R symmetry breaking of QCD (u, dand s), while the measurement of ππ scattering length checks only SU(2)L SU(2)R symmetry breaking (u, d). This is the main difference between ππ and πK scattering!

  22. πK scattering I. ChPT predicts s-wave scattering lengths: V. Bernard, N. Kaiser, U. Meissner. – 1991 ℒ (2), ℒ (4) and 1-loop A. Rossel. – 1999 ℒ (2), ℒ (4), ℒ (6) and 2-loop J. Bijnens, P. Talaver. – April 2004 II. Roy-Steiner equations: III. AK lifetime: J. Schweizer. – 2004

  23. Main goals and time scale for the A2πand AπKexperiments Manufacture of all new detectors and electronics:18 months Installation of new detectors:3 months 2006 Test of the Upgraded setup and calibration:4 months ObservationA2πin the long-lived states. 2007 and 2008 Measurement of A2πlifetime: 12 months In this time 86000 ππatomic pairs will be collected to estimateA2π lifetime with precision of: At thesame time we also plan to observeAπKand AKπ; to detect5000 πKatomic pairs to estimate AπKlifetime with precision of: This estimation of the beam time is based on the A2πstatistics collected in 2001 and on the assumptionof having 2.5 spills per supercycleduring 20hours perday.

  24. Upgrade DIRAC experimental set-up description Schematic top view 19

  25. Dual Target Method • Single/Multilayer target comparison: • Same amount of multiple scattering • Same background (CC, NC, ACC) • Same number of produced A2, but lower number of dissociated pairs

  26. Yields of atoms as a function of the proton beam momentum

  27. Expected accuracy for ππ-scattering (*)Precision on Pbr = (τ) can be increased and the error will be less than 0.6% private communication by D. Trautmann

  28. Expected accuracy for πK-scattering

  29. Conclusions Present low-energy QCD predictions for ππ and πK scattering lengths Expected results of DIRAC ADDENDUM at PS CERN DIRAC at SPS CERN ±1%(syst) ±1%(theor) Possibility of the observation of ( ± ) – atoms and of (K+K) – atoms will be studied

  30. DIRAC isometric view MU (Muon counters) Absorber PSH (Preshower Detector) CH (Cherenkov Detector) Dipole Magnet (B=1.65 T, BL=2.2 Tm) SFD (Scintillating Fiber detector) 3 planes VH & HH (Vertical and horizontal hodoscopes) Target station IH (Ionization Hodoscope) 4 planes DCs (Drift Chambers) 14 planes MSGCs (Microstrip Gas Chambers) 4 planes Setup features: angle to proton beam  = 5.7º ± 1º channel aperture  = 1.2·10-3sr momentum range 1.2 p  8 GeV/c momentum resolution p/p ≈ 3 · 10-3 resolution on relative momentum Qx ≈ Qy ≤ 0.5 MeV/c, and QL ≈ 0.5 MeV/c Upstream: MSGC, SFD,IH Downstream: DC, VH, HH, Ch, PSh, Mu

  31. Breakup probability

  32. DIRACanalysis • Improvements on systematic • CC background no improvement± 0.007 • signal shape no improvement± 0.002 • Multiple scattering measured to ±1%+ 0.002 /-0.002 • K+K-/ppbar admixtures to be measured*+ 0.000 /-0.023 • Finite size effects to be measured** /improved calculations+ 0.000 /-0.017 • Total+ 0.008 /-0.030 • * To be measured in 2006/2008 with new PID • ** To be measured in 2006/2008 with new trigger for identical particles at low Q • Improvements on data quality by fine tunings • Adjustments of drift characteristics almost run-by-run • B-field adjustment and alignment tuning with -mass •  New preselection for all runs • Comments on analysis strategies • Using only downstream detectors (Drift chambers) and investigating only QL causes less sensitivity to multiple scattering and to the signal shape. Studies are under way.

  33. Finite-size effects (I) characteristic scale |a| = 387 fm (Bohr radius of pp system) average value of r* ~ 10 fm range of  ~ 30 fm range of ' ~ 900 fm critical region of r* ~ |a| is formed by  and ' pairs UrQMD simulation pNi 24 GeV: • ~15%  pairs • < 1% ' pairs  shift in Pbr mainly due to pairs  '

  34. Experimental status on K In the 60’s and 70’s, set of experiments were performed to measure πK scattering amplitudes.Most of them were done studying the inelastic scattering of kaons on protonsor neutrons, and later also on deuterons. The kaon beams used in theseexperiments had energies ranging from2 to 13 GeV. The main idea of those experiments was to determine the contribution of the One PionExchange (OPE) mechanism. This allows to obtain the πK scattering amplitude. Analysis of experiments gave the phases of πK-scatteringin the region of 0.7≤m(πK) ≤ 2.5 GeV. The most reliable data on thephases belong to the region 1 ≤m(πK) ≤ 2.5 GeV.

More Related