1 / 25

Physics Opportunities at an Electron-Ion Collider (EIC)

Physics Opportunities at an Electron-Ion Collider (EIC). Thomas Ullrich Phases of QCD Matter Town Meeting Rutgers University January 12, 2006. Lots of hard work from and violent discussion with:

tavon
Download Presentation

Physics Opportunities at an Electron-Ion Collider (EIC)

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. Physics Opportunities at anElectron-Ion Collider (EIC) Thomas Ullrich Phases of QCD Matter Town Meeting Rutgers University January 12, 2006 Lots of hard work from and violent discussion with: A. Bruell (JLAB), J. Dunlop (BNL), R. Ent (JLAB), D. Morrison (BNL), P. Steinberg (BNL) , B. Surrow (MIT), R. Venugopalan (BNL), W. Vogelsang (BNL), Z. Xu (BNL)

  2. Crouching Quarks, Hidden Glue • Gluons: mediator of the strong interactions • Responsible for > 98% of the visible mass in universe • Determine all the essential features of strong interactions • QCD w/o quarks  • QCD w/o gluons  • QCD vacuum has non-perturbative structure driving: • Color confinement • Chiral symmetry breaking • In large due to fluctuations in the gluon fields in the vacuum • Hard to “see” the glue in the low-energy world • Does not couple to electromagnetism • Gluon degrees of freedom “missing” in hadronic spectrum • but dominate the structure of baryonic matter at low-x • are the dominant player at RHIC and LHC

  3. Deep Inelastic Scattering: Measure of resolution power Measure of inelasticity Measure of momentum fraction of struck quark “Perfect” Tomography What Do We Know About Glue in Matter? • Established Model: • linearDGLAP evolution scheme • works well for quarks  • cannot simultaneously describe gluons  • negative at low Q2 ? • explosion of G(x,Q2) at low-x  violation of unitarity • problems in describing diffractive events (HERA) • New picture: BKbased models introduce • non-linear effects •  saturation • characterized by a scale Qs(x,A) • grows with decreasing x and increasing A • arises naturally in the CGCframework

  4. Understanding Glue in Matter • Understanding the role of the glue in matter involves understanding its key properties which in turn define the required measurements: • What is the momentum distribution of the gluons in matter? • What is the space-time distributions of gluons in matter? • How do fast probes interact with the gluonic medium? • Do strong gluon fields effect the role of color neutral excitations (Pomerons)? • What system to use? • e+p works, but more accessible by using e+A • have analogs in e+p, but have never been measured in e+A • have no analog in e+p

  5. k’ k W p eA: Ideal to Study Non-Linear Effects • Scattering of electrons off nuclei: • Small x partonscannot be localized longitudinallyto better than size of nucleus • Virtual photon interacts coherently with all nucleons at a given impact parameter • Amplification of non-linear effects at small x. • e+A Collisions areIdealfor Studying “Glue” • Gain deeper understanding of QCD • Terra incognita: Physics of Strong Color Fields Nuclear “Oomph” Factor:

  6. The x, Q2 plane looks well mapped out – doesn’t it? Except for ℓ+A (nA) many of those with small A and very low statistics Electron Ion Collider (EIC): Ee = 10 GeV (20 GeV) EA = 100 GeV seN = 63 GeV (90 GeV) High LeAu ~ 6·1030 cm-2 s-1 eA Landscape and a new Electron Ion Collider Terra incognita:small-x, Q  Qs high-x, large Q2

  7. How EIC will Address the Important Questions • What is the momentum distribution of the gluons in matter? • Gluon distribution G(x,Q2) • FL ~ as G(x,Q2) (BTW: requires s scan) • Extract from scaling violation in F2: dF2/dlnQ2 • 2+1 jet rates (needs modeling of hadronization) • inelastic vector meson production (e.g. J/) • What is the space-time distributions of gluons in matter? • How do fast probes interact with the gluonic medium? • Do strong gluon fields effect the role of color neutral excitations (Pomerons)?

  8. F2 at EIC: Sea (Anti)Quarks Generated by Glue at Low x • F2 will be one of the first measurements at EIC • nDS, EKS, FGS: • pQCD models with different amounts of shadowing EIC will allow to distinguish between pQCD and saturation modelspredictions

  9. FL at EIC: Measuring the Glue Directly EIC: (10+100) GeV Ldt = 2/A fb-1 Q2/xs = y Needs s scan EIC will allow to measure G(x,Q2) with great precision

  10. How EIC will Address the Important Questions • What is the momentum distribution of the gluons in matter? • What is the space-time distributions of gluons in matter? • Measurement of structure functions for various mass numbers A (shadowing, EMC effect) and its impact parameter dependence • Deep virtual compton scattering (DVCS) • color transparency  color opacity • exclusive final states (e.g. vector meson production r, J/y, …) • How do fast probes interact with the gluonic medium? • Do strong gluon fields effect the role of color neutral excitations (Pomerons)?

  11. How EIC will Address the Important Questions • What is the momentum distribution of the gluons in matter? • What is the space-time distributions of gluons in matter? • How do fast probes interact with the gluonic medium? • Do strong gluon fields effect the role of color neutral excitations (Pomerons)? • Hadronization, Fragmentation • Energy loss (charm!)

  12. Charm at EIC • EIC: allows multi-differential measurements of heavy flavor • covers and extend energy range of SLAC, EMC, HERA, and JLAB allowing study of wide range of formation lengths Based on HVQDIS model, J. Smith

  13. How EIC will Address the Important Questions • What is the momentum distribution of the gluons in matter? • What is the space-time distributions of gluons in matter? • How do fast probes interact with the gluonic medium? • Do strong gluon fields effect the role of color neutral excitations (Pomerons)? • diffractive cross-section sdiff/stot • HERA/ep: 10% of all events are hard diffractive EIC/eA: 30%? • diffractive structure functions • shadowing == multiple diffractive scattering ? • diffractive vector meson production - very sensitive to G(x,Q2)

  14. Diffractive Structure Function F2D at EIC xIP= momentum fraction of the Pomeron with respect to the hadron = momentum fraction of the struck parton with respect to the Pomeron xIP = x/ EIC allows to distinguish between linear evolution and saturation models

  15. Even more crucial at LHC: Ratios of gluon distribution functions for Pb versus x from different models at Q2 = 5 GeV2: ? Accardi et al., hep-ph/0308248, CERN-2004-009-A Connection to RHIC & LHC Physics • Thermalization: • At RHIC system thermalizes (locally) fast (t0 ~ 0.6 fm/c) • We don’t know why and how? Initial conditions? • Jet Quenching: • Refererence: E-loss in cold matter • d+A alone won’t do •  need more precise handles • no data on charm from HERMES • Forward Region: • Suppression at forward rapidities • Color Glass Condensate ? • Gluon Distributions ? FF modification (parton energy loss)

  16. Many New Questions w/o Answers … • Latest News: • Observe “E-loss” of direct photons • Are we seeing the EMC effect? • Many (all?) of these questions cannot be answered • by studying A+A or p+A alone. • EIC provides new level of precision: • Handle on x, Q2 • Means to study effects exclusively • RHIC is dominated by glue  Need to know G(x,Q2) • In short we need ep but especially eA EIC

  17. EIC Collider Aspects • Requirements for EIC: • ep/eA program • polarized e, and p • maximal ion mass A • s ~ 100 GeV • high luminosity (L > LHera) • There are two complementary concepts to realize EIC: • eRHIC • construct electron beam to collide with the existing RHIC ion complex • high luminosity (6·1030 cm-2s-1), ions up to U, s ~ 100 GeV • ELIC • construct ion complex to collide with the upgraded CEBAF accelerator • very high luminosity (4·1034 cm-2s-1/A), only light ions, s ~ 50 GeV

  18. J. Pasukonis, B.Surrow, physics/0608290 I. Abt, A. Caldwell, X. Liu, J. Sutiak, hep-ex 0407053 Experimental Aspects • Concepts: • Focus on the rear/forward acceptance and thus on low-x / high-x physics • compact system of tracking and central electromagnetic calorimetry inside a magnetic dipole field and calorimetric end-walls outside • Focus on a wide acceptance detector system similar to HERA experiments • allow for the maximum possible Q2 range.

  19. Summary • eA collisions at an EIC allow us to: • Study the Physics ofStrong Color Fields • Establish (or not) the existence of the saturation regime • Explore non-linear QCD • Measure momentum & space-time of glue • Study the nature ofcolor singlet excitations(Pomerons) • Study and understand nuclear effects • shadowing, EMC effect, Energy Loss in cold matter • Test and study the limits ofuniversality(eA vs. pA) • Cross-fertilization: DIS (Hera), RHIC/LHC, JLAB In Short: EIC allows us to expand and deepen our understanding of QCD Now is a good time to get started! EIC White Paper: http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/np/EIC-science-1.7.pdf Soon: EIC/eA Specific Position Paper: http://www.bnl.gov/eic

  20. BACKUP

  21. Structure Functions in DIS • Quantitative description of electron-proton scattering Measure of resolution power Measure of inelasticity Measure of momentum fraction of struck quark

  22. Coherence lengthof virtual photon’s fluctuation intoqq:L∼ 1/2mN x k’ k r : dipole size p valid in the small-x limit eA From a “Dipole” Point of View In the rest frame of the nucleus: Propagation of a small pair, or “color dipole” • L >> 2R • Physics of strong color fields • Shadowing • Diffraction • L << 2R • Energy Loss • color transparency • EMC effect

  23. color opacity color transparency Survival Probability Vector Meson Production “color dipole” picture HERA: Survival prob. of qq pair of d=0.32 fm scattering off a proton from elastic vector meson production. Strong gluon fields in center of p at HERA (Qs ~ 0.5 GeV2)? b profile of nuclei more uniform and Qs ~ 2 GeV2

  24. Gluons and Quarks Gluons What Do We Know About Glue in Matter? • Deep Inelastic Scattering: • Distribution functionsG(x,Q2) evaluated through models •  rise steeply at low Bjorken x Is nature well-described by model evolution?

  25. momentum transfert = (P-P’)2 < 0diffractive mass of the final stateMX2 = (P-P’+l-l’)2 P hadron P Diffractive DIS is … … when the hadron/nuclei remains intact Pomeron ~ momentum fraction of the struck parton with respect to the Pomeron xpom = x/ rapidity gap :  = ln(1/xpom) xpom~ momentum fraction of the Pomeron with respect to the hadron HERA/ep: 10% of all events are hard diffractive EIC/eA: 30%? Black Disk Limit: 50%

More Related