1,211 research outputs found
Fragmentation functions of mesons in the Field-Feynman model
The fragmentation functions of the pion with distinction between
, , and are studied in the
Field-Feynman recursive model, by taking into account the flavor structure in
the excitation of quark-antiquark pairs by the initial quarks. The obtained
analytical results are compatible with available empirical results. The
framework is also extended to predict the fragmentation functions of the kaon
with distinction between , ,
, and . This work gives a significant
modification of the original model, and the predictions can be tested by future
experiments on the fragmentation functions of the kaon.Comment: 6 Latex pages, 10 figures, to appear in EPJ
Fragmentation Functions for Pions, Kaons, and Protons at Next-to-Leading Order
We present new sets of fragmentation functions for charged pions, charged
kaons, and protons, both at the leading and next-to-leading orders. They are
fitted to the scaled-momentum distributions of these hadrons measured in e+e-
annihilation on the Z-boson resonance at CERN LEP1 and SLAC SLC. These data
partly come as light-, charm-, bottom-quark-enriched and gluon-jet samples,
which allows us to treat all partons independently, after imposing the SU(2)
flavour symmetry relations. In order to gain sensitivity to the scaling
violation in fragmentation, we also include data from SLAC PEP, with
center-of-mass energy root(s)=29 GeV, in our fits. This allows us to also
determine the strong-coupling constant, with a competitive error. LEP1 data on
the longitudinal cross section as well as DESY DORIS and PETRA data at lower
energies nicely agree with theoretical predictions based on our fragmentation
functions.Comment: 28 pages, 11 eps figure
Heavy quark photoproduction
I present a review of selected topics in the computation of heavy flavour
cross sections in photon-hadron collisions.Comment: 4 pages Latex; npb.sty included. Talk given at DIS99, 19 - 23 April
1999, Zeuthen, D
Prompt Photon and Inclusive Production at RHIC and LHC
We present results for prompt photon and inclusive production in p-p
and A-A collisions at RHIC and LHC energies. We include the full
next-to-leading order radiative corrections and nuclear effects, such as
nuclear shadowing and parton energy loss. We find the next-to-leading order
corrections to be large and dependent. We show how measurements of
production at RHIC and LHC, at large , can provide valuable
information about the nature of parton energy loss.
We calculate the ratio of prompt photons to neutral pions and show that at
RHIC energies this ratio increases with approaching one at
GeV, due to the large suppression of production. We show that at the
LHC, this ratio has steep dependence and approaches 10% effect at GeV.Comment: Talk presented by I. Sarcevic, to appear in the Proceedings of Quark
Matter 2002; 4 pages including 4 color figure
The non-Abelian feature of parton energy loss in energy dependence of jet quenching in high-energy heavy-ion collisions
One of the non-Abelian features of parton energy loss is the ratio between gluon and quark jets. Since jet production rate is
dominated by quark jets at high and by gluon jets at low
, high hadron suppression in high-energy heavy-ion collisions should
reflect such a non-Abelian feature. Within a leading order perturbative QCD
parton model that incorporates transverse expansion and Woods-Saxon nuclear
distribution, the energy dependence of large GeV/ hadron
suppression is found to be sensitive to the non-Abelian feasture of parton
energy loss and could be tested by data from low energy runs at RHIC or data
from LHC.Comment: RevTex 4, 7 pages, 3 figure
Color-Octet Contributions to J/psi Photoproduction via Fragmentation at HERA
We study J/psi photoproduction via fragmentation at next-to-leading order in
the QCD-improved parton model, using the nonrelativistic factorization
formalism proposed by Bodwin, Braaten, and Lepage. We consider direct and
resolved photoproduction of prompt J/psi mesons and chi_{cJ} mesons radiatively
decaying to J/psi+gamma, taking into account the formation of both
color-singlet and color-octet c anti-c states. Adopting the values of the
long-distance color-octet matrix elements extracted from fits to prompt-J/psi
data recently taken at the Fermilab Tevatron, we predict that measurements of
J/psi photoproduction at DESY HERA should show a distinctive excess over the
expectation based on the color-singlet model at small values of the
inelasticity variable z. This is complementary to the expected enhancement at z
close to 1 due to the color-octet contribution to photon-gluon fusion.Comment: 10 pages (Latex), 3 figures (Postscript
Energy Dependence of Jet Quenching and Life-time of the Dense Matter in High-energy Heavy-ion Collisions
Suppression of high hadron spectra in high-energy heavy-ion collisions
at different energies is studied within a pQCD parton model incorporating
medium induced parton energy loss. The dependence of the nuclear
modification factor is found to depend on both the energy
dependence of the parton energy loss and the power-law behavior of the initial
jet spectra. The high hadron suppression at GeV and its
centrality dependence are studied in detail. The overall values of the
modification factor are found to provide strong constraints on the lifetime of
the dense matter.Comment: 6 pages in RevTex with 3 postscript figure
Azimuthal Asymmetries in Hadronic Final States at HERA
The distribution of hadrons produced in deeply inelastic electron-proton
collisions depends on the azimuthal angle between lepton scattering plane and
hadron production plane in the photon-proton centre-of-mass frame. In addition
to the well known up-down asymmetry induced by the azimuthal dependence of the
Born level subprocess, there is also a non-vanishing left-right asymmetry,
provided the incoming electron is polarized. This asymmetry is
time-reversal-odd and induced by absorptive corrections to the Born level
process. We investigate the numerical magnitude of azimuthal asymmetries in
semi-inclusive hadron production at HERA with particular emphasis on a possible
determination of the time-reversal-odd asymmetry.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 7 figures included, The complete paper, including
figures, is also available via anonymous ftp at
ftp://ttpux2.physik.uni-karlsruhe.de/ttp99/ttp99-29/ or via www at
http://www-ttp.physik.uni-karlsruhe.de/Preprints
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