3rd Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Volume 54, Number 10
Tuesday–Saturday, October 13–17, 2009;
Waikoloa, Hawaii
Session 2WG: Workshop on Transverse Spin and the Transverse Structure of the Nucleon
2:00 PM–5:30 PM,
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Room: Kings 2
Chair: Toshi-Aki Shibata, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.HAW.2WG.3
Abstract: 2WG.00003 : Theory of Transverse Spin and Transverse Structure of the Nucleon
3:00 PM–3:30 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Yuji Koike
(Niigata University)
Large single transverse spin asymmetries (SSA) observed in
various collision processes opened a new window to disentangle
QCD dynamics and quark-gluon substructure of the nucleon. Since
SSA is a ``naively T-odd'' observable, it can only occur as an
interference between the scattering amplitudes which have
different complex phases in a time-reversal invariant theory
like QCD. A conventional framework for hard inclusive
processes, i.e. perturbative QCD in the twist-2 level, can only
give rise to a negligible asymmetry and thus can not explain the
observed data. Understanding the origin of the large SSAs
requires the extention of the framework of the QCD hard
processes, and by now
QCD mechanisms leading to large SSAs have been clarified in
greater
detail. These mechanisms based on different perspectives
introduce new concepts describing the nucleon structure not
present in the conventional parton model, such as ``parton's
intrinsic transverse momentum'' and ``multi-parton correlations.''
Precise and unambiguous definition of these ideas requires
much more careful theoretical analyses than
the twist-2 case, in particular, in connection with the
universality of the parton distribution/fragmentation functions,
gauge invariance and factorization properties of the cross
sections.
In the literature, QCD mechanisms for SSAs are often classified
into two categories. One is based on the (naively) ``T-odd''
distribution and fragmentation functions in the transverse
momentum dependent
(TMD) factorization approach. Sivers and Collins functions
are typical examples for this one. The other one is based on
the twist-3 quark-gluon (more generally, multi-parton such as
triple-gluon) correlation functions in the collinear
factorization approaches. The former mechanism can describe
SSAs in the small-$p_T$ region ($p_T \ll Q$) as a leading-twist
effect, while the latter one describes SSAs in the
large $p_T$ region as a twist-3 effect. Both approaches have
been applied to study SSAs in various processes,
such as semi-inclusive deep-inelestic-scattering (SIDIS),
Drell-Yan processes, $p^{\uparrow} p \to h X$ ($h=\pi,\ K\, D$
etc) etc, for which experimental measurements are ongoing
at DESY, CERN, J-Lab and BNL-RHIC etc.
Although the starting points of the analysis
and the applicable kinematic region
for these two mechanisms are different, they
are shown to give identical SSAs in the intermediate region of
$p_T$ for the ``Sivers'' type SSA. Universality
of the TMD functions and the factorization property with TMD
functions have been studied in detail. Gauge invariance
and the factorization property of the twist-3 cross section
in the latter approach is also understood.
In this talk, I will first review recent developments in the
theoretical frameworks for SSAs described above, and then
I will present our recent works on SSAs based on the twist-3
mechanisms. I will discuss the azimuthal structure of the
twist-3 single-spin-dependent cross section for SIDIS and
$A_N$ for $p^{\uparrow} p\to h X$ including all kinds of pole
contributions.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.HAW.2WG.3