2,419 research outputs found
Rotation-invariant relations in vector meson decays into fermion pairs
The rotational properties of angular momentum eigenstates imply the existence
of a frame-independent relation among the parameters of the decay distribution
of vector mesons into fermions. This relation is a generalization of the
Lam-Tung identity, a result specific to Drell-Yan production in perturbative
QCD, here shown to be equivalent to the dynamical condition that the dilepton
always originates from a transversely polarized photon
A new approach to quarkonium polarization studies
Significant progress in understanding quarkonium production requires improved
polarization measurements, fully considering the intrinsic multidimensionality
of the problem. We propose a frame-invariant formalism which minimizes the
dependence of the measured result on the experimental acceptance, facilitates
the comparison with theoretical calculations, and provides a much needed
control over systematic effects due to detector limitations and analysis
biases. This formalism is a direct and generic consequence of the rotational
invariance of the dilepton decay distribution and is independent of any
assumptions specific to particular models of quarkonium production
Searching for Quark Matter at the CERN SPS
This article gives a brief overview of some recent advances in our understanding of the physics of dense strongly interacting matter, from measurements done at the CERN SPS. The presently available results are very interesting, and are likely to reflect the production of a new state of matter in central Pb-Pb collisions, at the highest SPS energies. However, important questions require further work. Particular emphasis is given to developments made since the Quark Matter 1999 conference, and to issues that justify the continuation of the SPS heavy ion physics program beyond year 2000.This article gives a brief overview of some recent advances in our understanding of the physics of dense strongly interacting matter, from measurements done at the CERN SPS. The presently available results are very interesting, and are likely to reflect the production of a new state of matter in central Pb-Pb collisions, at the highest SPS energies. However, important questions require further work. Particular emphasis is given to developments made since the Quark Matter 1999 conference, and to issues that justify the continuation of the SPS heavy ion physics program beyond year 2000
Minimal physical constraints on the angular distributions of two-body boson decays
The angular distribution of the two-body decay of a boson of unknown
properties is strongly constrained by angular momentum conservation and
rotation invariance, as well as by the nature of the detected decay particles
and of the colliding ones. Knowing the border between the "physical" and
"unphysical" parameter domains defined by these "minimal constraints"
(excluding specific hypotheses on what is still subject of measurement) is a
useful ingredient in the experimental determinations of angular distributions
and can provide model-independent criteria for spin characterizations. In
particular, analysing the angular decay distribution with the general
parametrization for the J = 2 case can provide a model-independent
discrimination between the J = 0 and J = 2 hypotheses for a particle produced
by two real gluons and decaying into two real photons
Rotation-invariant observables in parity-violating decays of vector particles to fermion pairs
The di-fermion angular distribution observed in decays of inclusively
produced vector particles is characterized by two frame-independent
observables, reflecting the average spin-alignment of the produced particle and
the magnitude of parity violation in the decay. The existence of these
observables derives from the rotational properties of angular momentum
eigenstates and is a completely general result, valid for any J=1 state and
independent of the production process. Rotation-invariant formulations of
polarization and of the decay parity-asymmetry can provide more significant
measurements than the commonly used frame-dependent definitions, also improving
the quality of the comparisons between the measurements and the theoretical
calculations.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev.
Quarkonium production in the LHC era: a polarized perspective
Polarization measurements are usually considered as the most difficult
challenge for the QCD description of quarkonium production. In fact, global
data fits for the determination of the non-perturbative parameters of
bound-state formation traditionally exclude polarization observables and use
them as a posteriori verifications of the predictions, with perplexing results.
With a change of perspective, we move polarization data to the centre of the
study, advocating that they actually provide the strongest fundamental
indications about the production mechanisms, even before we explicitly consider
perturbative calculations.
Considering psi(2S) and Y(3S) measurements from LHC experiments and
state-of-the-art NLO short-distance calculations in the framework of
non-relativistic QCD factorization (NRQCD), we perform a search for a kinematic
domain where the polarizations can be correctly reproduced together with the
cross sections, by systematically scanning the phase space and accurately
treating the experimental uncertainties. This strategy provides a
straightforward solution to the "quarkonium polarization puzzle" and reassuring
signs that the theoretical framework is reliable. At the same time, the results
expose unexpected hierarchies in the non-perturbative NRQCD parameters, that
open new paths towards the understanding of bound-state formation in QCD.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Lett.
From identical S- and P-wave pT/M spectra to maximally distinct polarizations: probing NRQCD with chi states
A global analysis of ATLAS and CMS measurements reveals that, at
mid-rapidity, the directly-produced , and J/
mesons have differential cross sections of seemingly identical shapes, when
presented as a function of the mass-rescaled transverse momentum, . This identity of kinematic behaviours among S- and P-wave quarkonia is
certainly not a natural expectation of non-relativistic QCD (NRQCD), where each
quarkonium state is supposed to reflect a specific family of elementary
production processes, of significantly different -differential cross
sections. Remarkably, accurate kinematic cancellations among the variegated
NRQCD terms (colour singlets and octets) of its factorization expansion can
lead to a surprisingly good description of the data. This peculiar tuning of
the NRQCD mixtures leads to a clear prediction regarding the and
polarizations, the only observables not yet measured: they should
be almost maximally different from one another, and from the J/
polarization, a striking exception in the global panorama of quarkonium
production. Measurements of the difference between the ,
and J/ polarizations, complementing the observed identity of momentum
dependences, represent a decisive probe of NRQCD.Comment: Submitted to European Physical Journal
Minimal physical constraints on the angular distributions of two-body boson decays
The angular distribution of the two-body decay of a boson of unknown properties is strongly constrained by angular momentum conservation and rotation invariance, as well as by the nature of the detected decay particles and of the colliding ones. Knowing the border between the "physical" and "unphysical" parameter domains defined by these "minimal constraints" (excluding specific hypotheses on what is still subject of measurement) is a useful ingredient in the experimental determinations of angular distributions and can provide model-independent criteria for spin characterizations. In particular, analysing the angular decay distribution with the general parametrization for the J = 2 case can provide a model-independent discrimination between the J = 0 and J = 2 hypotheses for a particle produced by two real gluons and decaying into two real photons.Peer Reviewe
J/psi polarization from fixed-target to collider energies
The determination of the magnitude and "sign" of the J/psi polarization
crucially depends on the reference frame used in the analysis of the data and a
full understanding of the polarization phenomenon requires measurements
reported in two "orthogonal" frames, such as the Collins-Soper and helicity
frames. Moreover, the azimuthal anisotropy can be, in certain frames, as
significant as the polar one. The seemingly contradictory J/psi polarization
results reported by E866, HERA-B and CDF can be consistently described assuming
that the most suitable axis for the measurement is along the direction of the
relative motion of the colliding partons, and that directly produced J/psi's
are longitudinally polarized at low momentum and transversely polarized at high
momentum. We make specific predictions that can be tested on existing CDF data
and by LHC measurements, which should show a full transverse polarization for
direct J/psi mesons of pT > 25 GeV/c
A microscopic calculation of secondary Drell-Yan production in heavy ion collisions
A study of secondary Drell-Yan production in nuclear collisions is presented for SPS energies. In addition to the lepton pairs produced in the initial collisions of the projectile and target nucleons, we consider the potentially high dilepton yield from hard valence antiquarks in produced mesons and antibaryons. We calculate the secondary Drell-Yan contributions taking the collision spectrum of hadrons from the microscopic model URQMD. The con- tributions from meson-baryon interactions, small in hadron-nucleus interac- tions, are found to be substantial in nucleus-nucleus collisions at low dilepton masses. Preresonance collisions of partons may further increase the yields
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