Abstract

We present the first chiral-continuum extrapolated up, down and strange quark spin contribution to the proton spin using lattice QCD. For the connected contributions, we use eleven ensembles of 2+1+1-flavor of Highly Improved Staggered Quarks (HISQ) generated by the MILC Collaboration. They cover four lattice spacings $a \approx \{0.15,0.12,0.09,0.06\}$ fm and three pion masses, $M_\pi \approx \{315,220,135\}$ MeV, of which two are at the physical pion mass. The disconnected strange calculations are done on seven of these ensembles, covering the four lattice spacings but only one with the physical pion mass. The disconnected light quark calculation was done on six ensembles at two values of $M_\pi \approx \{315,220\}$ MeV. High-statistics estimates on each ensemble for all three quantities allow us to quantify systematic uncertainties and perform a simultaneous chiral-continuum extrapolation in the lattice spacing and the light-quark mass. Our final results are $\Delta u \equiv \langle 1 \rangle_{\Delta u^+} = 0.777(25)(30)$, $\Delta d \equiv \langle 1 \rangle_{\Delta d^+} = -0.438(18)(30)$, and $\Delta s \equiv \langle 1 \rangle_{\Delta s^+} = -0.053(8)$, adding up to a total quark contribution to proton spin of $\sum_{q=u,d,s} (\frac{1}{2} \Delta q) = 0.143(31)(36)$. The second error is the systematic uncertainty associated with the chiral-continuum extrapolation. These results are obtained without model assumptions and are in good agreement with the recent COMPASS analysis $0.13 < \frac{1}{2} \Delta \Sigma < 0.18$, and with the $\Delta q$ obtained from various global analyses of polarized beam or target data.

Highlights

  • We present the first chiral-continuum extrapolated up, down, and strange quark spin contribution to the proton spin using lattice QCD

  • In 1987, the European Muon Collaboration measured the spin asymmetry in polarized deep inelastic scattering and presented the remarkable result that the sum of the spins of the quarks contributes less than half of the total spin of the proton [1]

  • Lattice QCD can unravel the mystery of where the proton gets its spin by measuring the matrix elements of appropriate quark and gluon operators within the nucleon state

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

In 1987, the European Muon Collaboration measured the spin asymmetry in polarized deep inelastic scattering and presented the remarkable result that the sum of the spins of the quarks contributes less than half of the total spin of the proton [1]. This unexpected result was termed the “proton spin crisis.”. Lattice QCD can unravel the mystery of where the proton gets its spin by measuring the matrix elements of appropriate quark and gluon operators within the nucleon state. Δs is the least well known and current analyses [4] often rely on assumptions such as SU(3) symmetry and Δs 1⁄4 Δs

LATTICE METHODOLOGY
EXCITED-STATE CONTAMINATION
RENORMALIZATION OF THE OPERATORS
THE CONTINUUM-CHIRAL EXTRAPOLATION
COMPARISON WITH PREVIOUS WORK AND CONCLUSIONS
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