9,557 research outputs found
The photon angular momentum contrroversy: Resolution of a conflict between laser optics and particle physics
The claim some years ago, contrary to all textbooks, that the angular
momentum of a photon (and gluon) can be split in a gauge-invariant way into an
orbital and spin term, sparked a major controversy in the Particle Physics
community. A further cause of upset was the realization that the gluon
polarization in a nucleon, a supposedly physically meaningful quantity,
corresponds only to the gauge-variant gluon spin derived from Noether's
theorem, evaluated in a particular gauge. On the contrary, Laser Physicists
have, for decades, been happily measuring physical quantities which correspond
to orbital and spin angular momentum evaluated in a particular gauge. This
paper reconciles the two points of view.Comment: 6 pages, no figure
Some Remarks on Methods of QCD Analysis of Polarized DIS Data
The results on polarized parton densities (PDFs) obtained using different
methods of QCD analysis of the present polarized DIS data are discussed. Their
dependence on the method used in the analysis, accounting or not for the
kinematic and dynamic 1/Q^2 corrections to spin structure function g_1, is
demonstrated. It is pointed out that the precise data in the preasymptotic
region require a more careful matching of the QCD predictions to the data in
this region in order to determine the polarized PDFs correctly.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
A New Study of the Polarized Parton Densities in the Nucleon
We present a new next-to-leading order QCD analysis of the world data on
inclusive polarized deep inelastic lepton-nucleon scattering adding to the old
set of data the final SMC results, the HERMES proton and very recent SLAC/E155
deuteron data. We find an excellent fit to the data and present results for the
polarized parton densities in different factorization schemes. These results
are in a good agreement with what follows from the theory. We have also found
that the main effect of the newly incorporated data is a better determination
of the polarized gluon density.Comment: 9 pages, latex, 5 ps figures Presented at the 7th International
Workshop on Deep Inelastic Scattering and QCD, Zeuthen, Germany, April 19-23,
199
Parton intrinsic motion: suppression of the Collins mechanism for transverse single spin asymmetries in p(transv. polarised) p --> pion + X
We consider a general formalism to compute inclusive polarised and
unpolarised cross sections within pQCD and the factorisation scheme, taking
into account parton intrinsic motion in distribution and fragmentation
functions, as well as in the elementary dynamics. Surprisingly, the intrinsic
partonic motion, with all the correct azimuthal angular dependences, produces a
strong suppression of the transverse single spin asymmetry arising from the
Collins mechanism. As a consequence, and in contradiction with earlier claims,
the Collins mechanism is unable to explain the large asymmetries found in
p(transv. polarised) p --> pion + X at moderate to large Feynman x_F. The
Sivers effect is not suppressed.Comment: LaTeX, 21+1 pages, 1 ps figur
Partition regularity with congruence conditions
An infinite integer matrix A is called image partition regular if, whenever
the natural numbers are finitely coloured, there is an integer vector x such
that Ax is monochromatic. Given an image partition regular matrix A, can we
also insist that each variable x_i is a multiple of some given d_i? This is a
question of Hindman, Leader and Strauss.
Our aim in this short note is to show that the answer is negative. As an
application, we disprove a conjectured equivalence between the two main forms
of partition regularity, namely image partition regularity and kernel partition
regularity.Comment: 5 page
The angular momentum controversy: What's it all about and does it matter?
The general question, crucial to an understanding of the internal structure
of the nucleon, of how to split the total angular momentum of a photon or gluon
into spin and orbital contributions is one of the most important and
interesting challenges faced by gauge theories like Quantum Electrodynamics and
Quantum Chromodynamics. This is particularly challenging since all QED
textbooks state that such an splitting cannot be done for a photon (and a
fortiori for a gluon) in a gauge-invariant way, yet experimentalists around the
world are engaged in measuring what they believe is the gluon spin! This
question has been a subject of intense debate and controversy, ever since, in
2008, it was claimed that such a gauge-invariant split was, in fact, possible.
We explain in what sense this claim is true and how it turns out that one of
the main problems is that such a decomposition is not unique and therefore
raises the question of what is the most natural or physical choice. The
essential requirement of measurability does not solve the ambiguities and leads
us to the conclusion that the choice of a particular decomposition is
essentially a matter of taste and convenience. In this review, we provide a
pedagogical introduction to the question of angular momentum decomposition in a
gauge theory, present the main relevant decompositions and discuss in detail
several aspects of the controversies regarding the question of gauge
invariance, frame dependence, uniqueness and measurability. We stress the
physical implications of the recent developments and collect into a separate
section all the sum rules and relations which we think experimentally relevant.
We hope that such a review will make the matter amenable to a broader community
and will help to clarify the present situation.Comment: 96 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables, review prepared for Physics Report
Parton distribution functions of proton in a light-front quark-diquark model
We present the parton distribution functions (PDFs) for un- polarised,
longitudinally polarized and transversely polarized quarks in a proton using
the light-front quark diquark model. We also present the scale evolution of
PDFs and calculate axial charge and tecsor charge for and quarks at a
scale of experimental findings.Comment: XXII DAE-BRNS High Energy Physics Symposium, December 12-16, 2016,
University of Delhi, India; 4 pages, 1 figur
The Ext algebra and a new generalisation of D-Koszul algebras
We generalise Koszul and D-Koszul algebras by introducing a class of graded
algebras called (D,A)-stacked algebras. We give a characterisation of
(D,A)-stacked algebras and show that their Ext algebra is finitely generated as
an algebra in degrees 0, 1, 2 and 3. In the monomial case, we give an explicit
description of the Ext algebra by quiver and relations, and show that the ideal
of relations has a quadratic Gr\"obner basis; this enables us to give a
regrading of the Ext algebra under which the regraded Ext algebra is a Koszul
algebra.Comment: New title; minor changes; 25 page
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