2008 Annual Meeting of the Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 53, Number 12
Thursday–Sunday, October 23–26, 2008;
Oakland, California
Session EA: Nucleon Spin Structure and Its Spin-Offs
4:00 PM–5:48 PM,
Friday, October 24, 2008
Room: Simmons Ballroom 2-3
Chair: Jamie Nagle, University of Colorado at Boulder
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.DNP.EA.2
Abstract: EA.00002 : The nucleon spin structure at short distance
4:36 PM–5:12 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Ralf Seidl
(RBRC)
The spin structure of the nucleon has been the basis of several
surprises in the past. After the EMC experiment showed that the
quark spin contribution to the nucleon spin was small, several
experiments were performed to further investigate this ``spin
crisis.'' Deep inelastic scattering (DIS) experiments at CERN,
SLAC, and DESY successfully confirmed the low quark spin
contribution to the nucleon. Using semi-inclusive DIS, SMC,
HERMES and COMPASS were also able to obtain flavor separated
quark polarizations. DIS experiments are only sensitive to gluon
polarization at NLO via the QCD evolution of the structure
function $g_1$, or through di-jet/hadron production in
photon-gluon fusion processes. Proton-proton collisions are
sensitive to the
gluon polarization at leading order. The RHIC experiments PHENIX
and STAR have measured inclusive pion and jet asymmetries which
exclude huge gluon polarizations but a substantial contribution
to the spin of the nucleon is still possible.
Another aspect of spin measurements are transverse spin
phenomena. Once deemed to be vanishing in perturbative QCD recent
nonzero transverse single spin asymmetries observed at RHIC and
HERMES could be explained in the framework of transverse momentum
dependent (TMD) distribution and fragmentation functions. One is
the so-called Sivers function which requires a nonzero parton
orbital angular momentum. Early global analysises were able to
combine the data obtained at RHIC, COMPASS and HERMES. Another
TMD function is the Collins fragmentation function, first
measured at BELLE, which serves as a transverse spin analyzer to
extract the quark transverse spin distribution from the SIDIS
experiments. Also here a first global analysis of SIDIS and BELLE
data has been successfully performed. An overview on recent spin
related measurements at short distance, performed at PHENIX,
STAR, BRAHMS, HERMES, COMPASS and Belle will be given.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.DNP.EA.2