13,311 research outputs found
S-storage operators
In 1990, J.L. Krivine introduced the notion of storage operator to simulate,
for Church integers, the "call by value" in a context of a "call by name"
strategy. In this present paper, we define, for every -term S which
realizes the successor function on Church integers, the notion of S-storage
operator. We prove that every storage operator is a $S-storage operator. But
the converse is not always true
Nucleon Transverse Structure at COMPASS
COMPASS is a fixed target experiment at CERN. Part of its physics programme
is dedicated to study the transverse spin and the transverse momentum structure
of the nucleon using SIDIS. For these measurements, data have been collected
using transversely polarised proton and deuteron targets. A selection of recent
measurements of azimuthal asymmetries using data collected with transversely
polarised protons is presented.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, PANIC 201
Review of COMPASS results on transverse-spin effects in SIDIS
The transversity parton distribution remains a poorly known cornerstone in
the nucleon spin structure. While the Collins effect in spin asymmetries in
Semi-Inclusive DIS (SIDIS) is one crucial tool to address the transversity
function, the most promising alternative is the azimuthal asymmetry in SIDIS
when a hadron pair is detected in the final state. In this case, the chiral-odd
transversity function is coupled to another chiral-odd function, i.e. the
hadron-pair interference fragmentation function (IFF). The measurement of
azimuthal asymmetries in hadron-pair production on a transversely polarised
nucleon target has been performed at COMPASS using a 160 GeV/c muon beam of
CERN's M2 beam line. Results from the 2007 and 2010 recent measurements will be
presented and compared to model predictions.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, The European Physical Society Conference on High
Energy Physics, EPS-HEP2013, 18-24 July, 2013, Stockholm, Swede
Study of the hadronisation process from single hadron and hadron-pair production in SIDIS at COMPASS
Hadron production in hard scattering reactions is described by the
hadronization mechanism which combines quarks into final-state hadrons. Within
the theoretical framework of leading-twist collinear QCD, the cross section for
hadron production in semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering can be factorized
into a hard scattering cross section describing the hard interaction at the
quark level calculable in perturbative QED, and non-perturbative universal
functions: parton distribution functions which reflect the quark structure of
initial-state hadrons and collinear fragmentation functions which encode
details on the hadronization process. In the last decades, a major effort has
been achieved on theoretical and experimental levels and allowed to constraint,
with very high precision, parton distribution functions except strange quark
distribution, which still carries large uncertainties. Fragmentation functions,
however, remain at a very preliminary stage of study with a growing interest in
a more accurate and precise knowledge. Nowadays, while pion fragmentation
functions are known with a limited precision and kaon fragmentation functions
are poorly known, the situation for dihadron fragmentation functions turns out
to be behind the schedule and no studies or measurements have been yet
performed.Measuring both single hadron and hadron pair multiplicities in
semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering at COMPASS represent a fundamental
contribution towards a better understanding of the hadronization process and a
first measurement for hadron pair multiplicities in SIDIS. These measurements
will be presented and discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, contribution given at the 20th International
Symposium on Spin Physics (SPIN2012) JINR, Dubna, Russia, September 17 - 22,
2012. To be published in "Physics of Elementary Particles and Atomic Nuclei"
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