49 research outputs found
An improved global analysis of nuclear parton distribution functions including RHIC data
We present an improved leading-order global DGLAP analysis of nuclear parton
distribution functions (nPDFs), supplementing the traditionally used data from
deep inelastic lepton-nucleus scattering and Drell-Yan dilepton production in
proton-nucleus collisions, with inclusive high- hadron production data
measured at RHIC in d+Au collisions. With the help of an extended definition of
the function, we now can more efficiently exploit the constraints the
different data sets offer, for gluon shadowing in particular, and account for
the overall data normalization uncertainties during the automated
minimization. The very good simultaneous fit to the nuclear hard process data
used demonstrates the feasibility of a universal set of nPDFs, but also
limitations become visible. The high- forward-rapidity hadron data of
BRAHMS add a new crucial constraint into the analysis by offering a direct
probe for the nuclear gluon distributions -- a sector in the nPDFs which has
traditionally been very badly constrained. We obtain a strikingly stronger
gluon shadowing than what has been estimated in previous global analyses. The
obtained nPDFs are released as a parametrization called EPS08.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figures; for v2, we have revised the Table 1 and Fig.
13, and added the Fig. 14 and the Table 3 along with some more discussio
A global DGLAP analysis of nuclear PDFs
In this talk, we shortly report results from our recent global DGLAP analysis
of nuclear parton distributions. This is an extension of our former
EKS98-analysis improved with an automated minimization procedure and
uncertainty estimates. Although our new analysis show no significant deviation
from EKS98, a sign of a significantly stronger gluon shadowing could be seen in
the RHIC BRAHMS data.Comment: Talk given at EPS HEP 200
The Emerging QCD Frontier: The Electron Ion Collider
The self-interactions of gluons determine all the unique features of QCD and
lead to a dominant abundance of gluons inside matter already at moderate .
Despite their dominant role, the properties of gluons remain largely
unexplored. Tantalizing hints of saturated gluon densities have been found in
+p collisions at HERA, and in d+Au and Au+Au collisions at RHIC. Saturation
physics will have a profound influence on heavy-ion collisions at the LHC. But
unveiling the collective behavior of dense assemblies of gluons under
conditions where their self-interactions dominate will require an Electron-Ion
Collider (EIC): a new facility with capabilities well beyond those In this
paper I outline the compelling physics case for +A collisions at an EIC and
discuss briefly the status of machine design concepts. of any existing
accelerator.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, prepared for 20th International Conference on
Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions: Quark Matter 2008 (QM2008),
Jaipur, India, 4-10 Feb. 200
The physics potential of proton-nucleus collisions at the TeV scale
The LHC brings nuclear collisions to the TeV scale for the first time and the
first data show the qualitative differences of this new regime. The
corresponding phase-space available encompasses completely uncharted regions of
QCD in which high-density or high-temperature domains can be identified.
Proton-nucleus runs are essential for a complete interpretation of the data and
for the study of new regimes dominated by large occupation numbers in the
hadronic wave function. I comment here the physics opportunities for p+Pb runs
at the LHC and d+Au runs at RHIC and the corresponding needs in view of the new
Pb+Pb data from the LHC.Comment: Proceedings of the conference Quark Matter 2011, Annecy (France) May
201
Gluon Shadowing in DIS off Nuclei
Within a light-cone quantum-chromodynamics dipole formalism based on the
Green function technique, we study nuclear shadowing in deep-inelastic
scattering at small Bjorken xB < 0.01. Such a formalism incorporates naturally
color transparency and coherence length effects. Calculations of the nuclear
shadowing for the \bar{q}q Fock component of the photon are based on an exact
numerical solution of the evolution equation for the Green function, using a
realistic form of the dipole cross section and nuclear density function. Such
an exact numerical solution is unavoidable for xB > 0.0001, when a variation of
the transverse size of the \bar{q}q Fock component must be taken into account.
The eikonal approximation, used so far in most other models, can be applied
only at high energies, when xB < 0.0001 and the transverse size of the \bar{q}q
Fock component is "frozen" during propagation through the nuclear matter. At xB
< 0.01 we find quite a large contribution of gluon suppression to nuclear
shadowing, as a shadowing correction for the higher Fock states containing
gluons. Numerical results for nuclear shadowing are compared with the available
data from the E665 and NMC collaborations. Nuclear shadowing is also predicted
at very small xB corresponding to LHC kinematical range. Finally the model
predictions are compared and discussed with the results obtained from other
models.Comment: 29 pages including 7 figures; Fig.7 modified, some references and
corresponding discussion adde
Proton-Nucleus Collisions at the LHC: Scientific Opportunities and Requirements
Proton-nucleus (p+A) collisions have long been recognized as a crucial
component of the physics programme with nuclear beams at high energies, in
particular for their reference role to interpret and understand nucleus-nucleus
data as well as for their potential to elucidate the partonic structure of
matter at low parton fractional momenta (small-x). Here, we summarize the main
motivations that make a proton-nucleus run a decisive ingredient for a
successful heavy-ion programme at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and we
present unique scientific opportunities arising from these collisions. We also
review the status of ongoing discussions about operation plans for the p+A mode
at the LHC.Comment: 33 pages, 15 Figure