46 research outputs found
Hunting for CDF Multi-Muon "Ghost" Events at Collider and Fixed-Target Experiments
In 2008 the CDF collaboration discovered a large excess of events containing
two or more muons, at least one of which seemed to have been produced outside
the beam pipe. We investigate whether similar "ghost" events could (and should)
have been seen in already completed experiments. The CDF di-muon data can be
reproduced by a simple model where a relatively light X particle undergoes
four-body decay. This model predicts a large number of ghost events in Fermilab
fixed-target experiments E772, E789 and E866, applying the cuts optimized for
analyses of Drell-Yan events. A correct description of events with more than
two muons requires a more complicated model, where two X particles are produced
from a very broad resonance Y. This model can be tested in fixed-target
experiments only if the cut on the angles, or rapidities, of the muons can be
relaxed. Either way, the UA1 experiment at the CERN ppbar collider should have
observed O(100) ghost events.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Nuclear parton distributions at next to leading order
We perform a next to leading order QCD global analysis of nuclear deep
inelastic scattering and Drell-Yan data using the convolution approach to
parameterize nuclear parton densities. We find both a significant improvement
in the agreement with data compared to previous extractions, and substantial
differences in the scale dependence of nuclear effects compared to leading
order analyses.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Consequences of Nuclear Shadowing for Heavy Quarkonium Production in Hadron-Nucleus Interactions
We study nuclear shadowing in and production in
hadron-nucleus interactions and in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider and the Large Hadron Collider. %We define the
regions in where nuclear shadowing begins %to set in for \jp\ and \up. As
a consequence of the perturbative -dependence of gluon shadowing, we
predict that production is less suppressed than the . We
show that antishadowing leads to enhanced \jp\ production at ,
an effect reduced for production.Comment: LBL-35821 (Revtex file, 11 pages, 3 figures, included as postscript
files at the end
Nuclear dependence coefficient for the Drell-Yan and J/ production
Define the nuclear dependence coefficient in terms of ratio
of transverse momentum spectrum in hadron-nucleus and in hadron-nucleon
collisions: . We argue that in small region, the
for the Drell-Yan and J/ production is given by a universal function:\
, where parameters a and b are completely determined by either
calculable quantities or independently measurable physical observables. We
demonstrate that this universal function is insensitive to the
A for normal nuclear targets. For a color deconfined nuclear medium, the
becomes strongly dependent on the A. We also show that our
for the Drell-Yan process is naturally linked to perturbatively
calculated at large without any free parameters, and the
is consistent with E772 data for all .Comment: latex, 28 pages, 10 figures, updated two figures, and add more
discussion
Energy Loss versus Shadowing in the Drell-Yan Reaction on Nuclei
We present a new analysis of the E772 and E866 experiments on the nuclear
dependence of Drell-Yan (DY) lepton pair production resulting from the
bombardment of , Be, C, Ca, Fe, and W targets by 800 GeV/c protons at
Fermilab. We employ a light-cone formulation of the DY reaction in the rest
frame of the nucleus, where the dimuons detected at small values of Bjorken x_2
<< 1 may be considered to originate from the decay of a heavy photon radiated
from an incident quark in a bremsstrahlung process. We infer the energy loss of
the quark by examining the suppression of the nuclear-dependent DY ratios seen
as a function of projectile momentum fraction x_1 and dimuon mass M. Shadowing,
which also leads to nuclear suppression of dimuons, is calculated within the
same approach employing the results of phenomenological fits to deep inelastic
scattering data from HERA. The analysis yields -dE/dz =2.73 +/- 0.37 +/- 0.5
GeV/fm for the rate of quark energy loss per unit path length, a value
consistent with theoretical expectations including the effects of the inelastic
interaction of the incident proton at the surface of the nucleus. This is the
first observation of a nonzero energy loss effect in such experiments.Comment: 43 pages including 17 figure
Nuclear effects in at small in deep inelastic scattering on Li and He
We suggest to use polarized nuclear targets of Li and He to study
nuclear effects in the spin dependent structure functions .
These effects are expected to be enhanced by a factor of two as compared to the
unpolarized targets.
We predict a significant dependence at of due to nuclear shadowing and nuclear
enhancement. The effect of nuclear shadowing at is of an
order of 16% for and 10% for
. By imposing the requirement that
the Bjorken sum rule is satisfied we model the effect of enhancement.
We find the effect of enhancement at to be of an
order of for and
for , if enhancement
occupies the region (). We predict
a 2% effect in the difference of the scattering cross sections of deep
inelastic scattering of an unpolarized projectile off Li with =3/2
and =1/2. We also show explicitly that the many-nucleon description of
deep inelastic scattering off Li becomes invalid in the enhancement region
.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, RevTe
Nuclear effects in the Drell-Yan process at very high energies
We study Drell-Yan (DY) dilepton production in proton(deuterium)-nucleus and
in nucleus-nucleus collisions within the light-cone color dipole formalism.
This approach is especially suitable for predicting nuclear effects in the DY
cross section for heavy ion collisions, as it provides the impact parameter
dependence of nuclear shadowing and transverse momentum broadening, quantities
that are not available from the standard parton model. For p(D)+A collisions we
calculate nuclear shadowing and investigate nuclear modification of the DY
transverse momentum distribution at RHIC and LHC for kinematics corresponding
to coherence length much longer than the nuclear size. Calculations are
performed separately for transversely and longitudinally polarized DY photons,
and predictions are presented for the dilepton angular distribution.
Furthermore, we calculate nuclear broadening of the mean transverse momentum
squared of DY dileptons as function of the nuclear mass number and energy. We
also predict nuclear effects for the cross section of the DY process in heavy
ion collisions. We found a substantial nuclear shadowing for valence quarks,
stronger than for the sea.Comment: 46 pages, 18 figures, title changed and some discussion added,
accepted for publication in PR
Modelling J/psi production and absorption in a microscopic nonequilibrium approach
Charmonium production and absorption in heavy ion collisions is studied with
the Ultrarelativisitic Quantum Molecular Dynamics model. We compare the
scenario of universal and time independent color-octet dissociation cross
sections with one of distinct color-singlet J/psi, psi' and chi_c states,
evolving from small, color transparent configurations to their asymptotic
sizes. The measured J/psi production cross sections in pA and AB collisions at
SPS energies are consistent with both - purely hadronic - scenarios. The
predicted rapidity dependence of J/psi suppression can be used to discriminate
between the two experimentally. The importance of interactions with secondary
hadrons and the applicability of thermal reaction kinetics to J/psi absorption
are investigated. We discuss the effect of nuclear stopping and the role of
leading hadrons. The dependence of the psi' to J/psi ratio on the model
assumptions and the possible influence of refeeding processes is also studied.Comment: 35 pages, 16 figure
Coherence Time Effects on J/psi Production and Suppression in Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions
Using a coherence time extracted from high precision proton-nucleus Drell-Yan
measurements and a nuclear absorption cross section extracted from pA
charmonium production experiments, we study J/psi production and absorption in
nucleus-nucleus collisions. We find that coherence time effects are large
enough to affect the measured J/psi-to-Drell-Yan ratio. The S+U data at 200A
GeV/c measured by NA38 are reproduced quantitatively without the introduction
of any new parameters. However, when compared with recent NA50 measurements for
Pb+Pb at 158A GeV/c, the data is not reproduced in trend or in magnitude.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
Parton model versus color dipole formulation of the Drell-Yan process
In the kinematical region where the center of mass energy is much larger than
all other scales, the Drell-Yan process can be formulated in the target rest
frame in terms of the same color dipole cross section as low Bjorken-x deep
inelastic scattering. Since the mechanisms for heavy dilepton production appear
very different in the dipole approach and in the conventional parton model, one
may wonder whether these two formulations really represent the same physics. We
perform a comparison of numerical calculations in the color dipole approach
with calculations in the next-to-leading order parton model. For proton-proton
scattering, the results are very similar at low x_2 from fixed target to RHIC
energies, confirming the close connection between these two very different
approaches. We also compare the transverse momentum distributions of Drell-Yan
dileptons predicted in both formulations. The range of applicability of the
dipole formulation and the impact of future Drell-Yan data from RHIC for
determining the color dipole cross section are discussed. A detailed derivation
of the dipole formulation of the Drell-Yan process is also included.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure