Abstract

We consider electron-deuteron deep-inelastic scattering (DIS) with detection of a proton in the nuclear fragmentation region ("spectator tagging") as a method for extracting the free neutron structure functions and studying their nuclear modifications. Such measurements could be performed at a future Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) with suitable forward detectors. The measured proton recoil momentum (~< 100 MeV in the deuteron rest frame) specifies the deuteron configuration during the high-energy process and permits a controlled theoretical treatment of nuclear effects. Nuclear and nucleonic structure are separated using methods of light-front quantum mechanics. The impulse approximation (IA) to the tagged DIS cross section contains the free neutron pole, which can be reached by on-shell extrapolation in the recoil momentum. Final-state interactions (FSI) distort the recoil momentum distribution away from the pole. In the intermediate-x region 0.1 < x < 0.5 FSI arise predominantly from interactions of the spectator proton with slow hadrons produced in the DIS process on the neutron (rest frame momenta ~< 1 GeV, target fragmentation region). We construct a schematic model describing this effect, using final-state hadron distributions measured in nucleon DIS experiments and low-energy hadron scattering amplitudes. We investigate the magnitude of FSI, their dependence on the recoil momentum (angular dependence, forward/backward regions), their analytic properties, and their effect on the on-shell extrapolation. We comment on the prospects for neutron structure extraction in tagged DIS with EIC. We discuss possible extensions of the FSI model to other kinematic regions (large/small x). In tagged DIS at x << 0.1 FSI resulting from diffractive scattering on the nucleons become important and require separate treatment.

Highlights

  • Measurements of deep-inelastic lepton scattering (DIS) from nuclei with mass number A > 1 address several key topics in short-range nuclear structure and quantum chromodynamics (QCD)

  • We develop a dynamical model of nuclear Final-state interactions (FSIs) at “intermediate” x, defined as the region between the extreme valence quark regime at x 0.5 and the coherent regime at x 0.1

  • II we present the kinematic variables and invariant structure functions in tagged DIS, introduce the collinear frame used in the LF description, and discuss the recoil momentum variables

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

FSIs in tagged DIS may distort the recoil momentum distribution but should not modify the sum rules for the recoil momentum-integrated structure functions In our picture this can be accomplished by modeling the slow hadron-nucleon rescattering process as elastic scattering (no additional hadrons are produced) and implementing unitarity of the rescattering amplitude. In the present work we consider unpolarized electrondeuteron DIS and calculate the FSI effects in the tagged cross section integrated over the azimuthal angle of the recoil momentum, as relevant for the extraction of the neutron structure functions F2n and FLn. The extension to polarized electron-deuteron DIS with spectator tagging and azimuthal angle-dependent response functions will be left to a future study, as the number of structures in the cross section becomes very considerable [40]. There is an interesting formal analogy between FSIs in quasielastic deuteron breakup at ∼1–2 GeV incident momenta and our picture of slow-hadron rescattering in DIS, and one can establish the correspondence between the formulas

Kinematic variables
Cross section and structure functions
Collinear frames
Recoil momentum variables
Single-nucleon states
Deuteron wave function
Rotationally invariant representation
Spin degrees of freedom
LF current components
IA current
Structure functions
Spectral function
Nonrelativistic approximation
Analytic properties
FINAL-STATE HADRON DISTRIBUTIONS
Multiplicity distributions
Experimental distributions
Implications for FSI
FSI and IA currents
Distorted spectral function
Positivity properties
Recoil momentum dependence
Sum rules and unitarity
NEUTRON STRUCTURE EXTRACTION
VIII. SUMMARY AND OUTLOOK
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.