11/5/20151 energy evolution of sivers asymmetry in hard processes feng yuan lawrence berkeley...
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Energy Evolution of Sivers asymmetry in Hard Processes
Feng Yuan Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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Outlines
General theory background Implement the TMD evolution from low Q
SIDIS to Drell-Yan Match to high Q Drell-Yan/W/Z Collins asymmetries
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Hard processes
In the context of this talk, the hard processes means low transverse momentum hard processesSemi-inclusive DIS at low ptDrell-Yan/W/Z production Higgs production…
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Collinear vs TMD factorization
TMD factorization is an extension and simplification to the collinear factorization
Extends to the region where collinear fails Simplifies the kinematics
Power counting, correction 1/Q neglected
(PT,Q)=H(Q) f1(k1T,Q) f2(k2T, Q) S(T)There is no x- and kt-dependence in the hard
factor
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DGLAP vs CSS
DGLAP for integrated parton distributionsOne hard scale
(Q)=H(Q/) f1()… CSS for TMDs
Two scales, large double logs
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Evolution vs resummation
Any evolution is to resum large logarithms DGLPA resum single large logarithms CSS evolution resum double logarithms
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Energy Evolution CS evolution for TMD
distribution/fragmentation functions, scheme-dependentCollins-Soper 81, axial gaugeJi-Ma-Yuan 04, Feynman gauge, off-lightCollins 11, cut-offSCET, quite a few
CSS evolution on the cross sectionsTMD factorization implicit
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Energy dependence Collins-Soper Evolution, 1981 Collins-Soper-Sterman, 1985 Boer, 2001 Idilbi-Ji-Ma-Yuan, 2004 Kang-Xiao-Yuan, 2011 Collins 2010 Aybat-Collins-Rogers-Qiu, 2011 Aybat-Prokudin-Rogers,2012 Idilbi, et al., 2012
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Semi-inclusive DIS
Fourier transform Evolution
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Calculate at small-b
Sudakov
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b*-prescription and non-perturbative form factor b* always in perturbative region
This will introduce a non-perturbative form factors
Generic behavior
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Rogers et al.
Calculate the structure at two Q,
Relate high Q to low Q
Low Q parameterized as Gaussian
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BLNY form factors Fit to Drell-Yan and W/Z boson production
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BLNY form can’t describe SIDIS
Log Q dependence is so strong, leading to a≈0.08 at HERMES energy
Hermes data require a≈0.2
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BLNY will be evenWorseAny modification willIntroduce new problem
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It could be that the functional form is not adequate to describe large-b physics In particular, for \ln Q term (see follows)
Or evolution has to be reconsidered in the relative (still perturbative) low Q range around HERMES/COMPASSQ>~Q0~1/b*~2GeV (for bmax=0.5GeV-1)
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One solution: back to old way
Parameterize at scale Q0
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Limitations It’s an approximation: both Q0 and Q are
restricted to a limited range, definitely not for W/Z bosonLog(Q0 b) in the evolution kernel
Do not have correct behavior at small-b (could be improved), will have uncertainties at large pt
x-dependence is not integrated into the formalism
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Advantages
There is no Landau pole singularity in the integral
Almost parameter-freeNo Q-dependent non-perturbative form factorGaussian assumption at lower scale Q0
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Almost parameter-free prediction
SIDIS Drell-Yan
in similar x-range
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Fit to Sivers asymmetries
With the evolution effects taken into account. Not so large Q difference
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Systematics of the SIDIS experiments are well understood
Q range is large to apply perturbative QCD Sivers functions are only contributions to
the observed asymmetries
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Predictions at RHIC
About a factor of 2 reduction, as compared to previous order of magnitude difference
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Cross checks
Re-fit Rogers et al’s parameterization to the pt-distributions, and calculate the SSA, in similar range
Assume a simple Gaussian for both SIDIS and Drell-Yan (Schweitzer et al.), and again obtain similar size SSA for Drell-Yan
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Match to higher Q
Extract the transverse momentum-moment of the Sivers function, and use the b* prescription and resummation, and again obtain similar size of SSA for Drell-Yan
This can be used to calculate the asymmetries up to W/Z boson production
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High energies
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w/o evolution
b*-prescription
with evolution
Z boson
Q=5.5GeV
PT(GeV)
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Collins asymmetries
Ec.m.≈10GeV, di-hadron azimuthal asymmetric correlation in e+e- annihilation
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Collins asymmetries in SIDIS
asd
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Test the evolution at BEPC
Ec.m.=4.6GeV, di-hadron in e+e- annihilation BEPC-(Beijing electron-positron collider)
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It is extremely important to test this evolution effect
EIC will be perfect, because Q coverage Anselm Vossen also suggests to do it at
BELLE with ISR with various Q possible
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Conclusion We evaluate the energy dependence for
Sivers asymmetries in hard processes, from HERMES/COMPASS to typical Drell-Yan process
The same evolution procedure consistently describes the Collins asymmetries from HERMES/COMPASS and BELLE
Further tests are needed to nail down this issue
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