870 research outputs found
Small Gluonic Spots in the Nucleon: Searching for Signatures in Data
Nuclear shadowing and color glass condensate are possible only at
sufficiently small x where parton clouds of different nucleons overlap in the
longitudinal direction. Another condition vital for these effect, an overlap of
partons in impact parameters, is not easy to fulfill for gluons which are
located within small spots, as follows from the observed weakness of
diffractive gluon radiation (smallness of the triple-Pomeron coupling). The
predicted weakness of the leading twist gluon shadowing has been confirmed
recently by data for J/Psi production and Cronin effect in d-Au collisions at
RHIC. Smallness of gluonic spots also leads to a rather low value of the slope
of the Pomeron trajectory, confirmed by ZEUS data on elastic photoproduction of
J/Psi. At the same time, saturation of unitarity for central pp collisions
leads to a substantial increase of the Pomeron slope in good agreement with
elastic pp data.Comment: Talk given by B. Povh at the Quark Matter 200
Proton Spin in Deep Inelastic Scattering
So far the analyses of the polarized structure functions of the proton and
neutron have been limited to the evaluation of their integrals and comparing
them to the prediction of the static quark model of the nucleon. We extended
our analysis to the x dependence of the polarized structure functions and
observe: the measured structure function excellently agrees with the prediction
of the static quark model for Bjorken and drops rapidly for . It
is suggested that for Bjorken electrons get scattered on the undamaged
constituent quarks (alias valence quarks) denoted as quasi-elastic scattering
on the constituent quarks and for the constituent quarks fragment. In
the fragmentation strong interaction is involved which does not preserve the
polarization.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Presented at the workshop on Diffraction and
Low-x, Reggio Calabria, Aug. 26-Sept. 1, 201
Baryon Number Flow in High-Energy Collisions
It is not obvious which partons in the proton carry its baryon number (BN).
We present arguments that BN is associated with a specific topology of gluonic
fields, rather than with the valence quarks. The BN distribution is easily
confused with the difference between the quark and antiquark distributions. We
argue, however, that they have quite different x-dependences. The distribution
of BN asymmetry distribution is nearly constant at small x while q(x)-\bar q(x)
\propto \sqrt{x}. This constancy of BN produces energy independence of the \bar
pp annihilation cross section at high energies. Recent measurement of the
baryon asymmetry at small x at HERA confirms this expectation. The BN asymmetry
at mid-rapidities in heavy ion collisions is substantially enhanced by multiple
interactions, as has been observed in recent experiments at the SPS. The same
gluonic mechanism of BN stopping increases the production rate for cascade
hyperons in a good accord with data. We expect nearly the same as at SPS amount
of BN stopped in higher energy collisions at RHIC and LHC, which is, however,
spread ove larger rapidity intervals.Comment: The estimated baryon stopping at RHIC is corrected in the Summar
Baryon Asymmetry of the Proton Sea at Low
We predict a nonvanishing baryon asymmetry of the proton sea at low . It
is expected to be about and nearly -independent at . The asymmetry arises from the baryon-antibaryon component of the
Pomeron, rather than from the valence quarks of the proton, which are wide
believed carriers of baryon number. Experimental study of -distribution of
the baryon asymmetry of the proton sea can be performed in or
interactions at HERA, where are reachable, smaller than at any
of existing or planned proton colliders.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX type, including 5 figure
Properties of a future susy universe
In the string landscape picture, the effective potential is characterized by
an enormous number of local minima of which only a minuscule fraction are
suitable for the evolution of life. In this "multiverse", random transitions
are continually made between the various minima with the most likely
transitions being to minima of lower vacuum energy. The inflationary era in the
very early universe ended with such a transition to our current phase which is
described by a broken supersymmetry and a small, positive vacuum energy.
However, it is likely that an exactly supersymmetric (susy) phase of zero
vacuum energy as in the original superstring theory also exists and that, at
some time in the future, there will be a transition to this susy world. In this
article we make some preliminary estimates of the consequences of such a
transition.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures; intermediate extensions/revisions available at
http://www.bama.ua.edu/~lclavell/Susyria.pd
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