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So far, the exploration of the short-range structure of nuclei has been focused on the sector of light quarks. It is of great importance to extend the investigations to the sectors of strange and charm quarks. One of the promising approaches is checking the universality through the study of semi-inclusive deep inelastic lepton scattering on nuclei (nSIDIS) in which the production reaction is "tagged" with a strange or charmed particle. In this case, the relevant variable X can be found from the equation expressing the conservation of energy-momentum, baryonic number, and strangeness/charm in the reaction of the production of strange or charmed hadron
$ h $ in the interaction of the virtual photon with inter-nuclear target,$ \begin{array}{l} (P_\gamma+P_T-P_h)^2\geqslant(mX+m_{\rm miss})^2. \end{array} $
(1) Here,
$ P_\gamma(\nu,Q) $ ,$ P_T(mX,0) $ , and$ P_h(E_h,\boldsymbol {P_h}) $ are four-momenta of virtual photon, inter-nuclear target, and produced strange/charmed hadron, respectively;$ m_{\rm miss} $ denotes the mass of the lightest particle that has to be produced to meet the conservation laws. In the nucleus rest frame, the variable X is equal to minimal target mass, expressed in nucleon mass$ m $ , for which the production of the strange/charm particle with detected parameters is kinematically possible. Note that the Bjorken variable$ X_{\rm B} $ can also be interpreted as the minimum target mass in the nucleon mass units.With the condition of minimal missing mass
$ m_{\rm miss} $ in reaction, corresponding to the equality of the right- and left-side of Eq. (1), one finds that, for example, in the case of the production of the$ J/\psi $ meson with hidden charm,$ \begin{aligned}[b] X =\;& (1-z)^{-1}\ \big[(E_{J/\psi}-(q/\nu)P_{J/\psi}\cos\theta_{qJ/\psi})/m \\ &+ Q^2/2m\nu-m^2_{J/\psi}/2m\nu\big], \end{aligned} $
(2) where
$ E_{J/\psi} $ and$ P_{J/\psi} $ are the total energy and three-momentum of produced meson, respectively,$ \nu $ is the energy transfer from the incoming lepton,$ Q^2 = - q^2 $ is the four-momentum transfer, and$ m $ is the nucleon mass. Note also that$ z = E_{J/\psi}/\nu $ , which is the fraction of the virtual photon energy carried by the$ J/\psi $ meson, and$ \theta_{qJ/\psi} $ is the angle between$ \boldsymbol q = \boldsymbol k - \boldsymbol k' $ ($ \boldsymbol k $ and$ \boldsymbol k' $ are three-momentum vectors of incident and scattering leptons, respectively) and$ \boldsymbol P_{J/\psi} $ .For different species of hadrons, the variable X differs from that defined by Eq. (2) in factors expressing the mass corrections. For the production of hadron
$ h $ in the interaction of virtual photon with two-nucleon SRC, the magnitude of X changes in the interval$ 1<X<2 $ . With increasing energy-momentum transfer ratio,$ q/\nu\rightarrow {1} $ , the terms containing the factor$ 1/2m\nu $ in Eq. (2) can be neglected. Then, the variable X tends to the following simpler expression:$ \begin{array}{l} X = X_{\rm B}+\alpha_{J/\psi}, \end{array} $
(3) i.e., the sum of the Bjorken
$ X_{\rm B} $ and light cone variable$ \alpha_{J/\psi} = (E_{J/\psi}-P_{J/\psi}^{\|})/m $ for the$ J/\psi $ meson.Concerning the production of meson pairs with open strangeness or open charm in nSIDIS reactions, the relevant variable X can be found from an equation similar to Eq. (1). For instance, for the
$ K^+K^- $ pair creation, one has$ \begin{array}{l} X = (1-z_+-z_-)^{-1}(X_{\rm B} +X_++X\_ -M^2_{+-}/2m\nu). \end{array} $
(4) Here,
$ z_+ = E_+/\nu $ and$ z_- = E_-/\nu $ are the fractions of the virtual photon energy carried by the$ K^+ $ and$ K^- $ mesons, respectively,$ X_{\rm B} $ is the Bjorken variable,$ X_+ $ and$ X_- $ are X variables for the positively and negatively charged kaons, respectively, and$ M^2_{+-} $ denotes the invariant mass squared of the kaon pair. Note that the cross section for nSIDIS reaction depends on both the lepton and hadron kinematic parameters. By identifying the produced hadrons, it is possible to obtain valuable information about the parent strange or charmed quarks from multidimensional analysis of the corresponding production cross section.The universality is an inherent underlying feature of the connection between the SRC and EMC effects. Universality means that the partonic structure of the SRC is responsible for the EMC effect for all nuclei in the same manner. Regarding light
$ u $ and$ d $ quarks, which are part of nucleons, it was shown that the nuclear structure functions of different nuclei in the EMC region become a universal function once they are appropriately rescaled by the number of SRC pairs [18]. One would expect the existence of universality of the SRC in the production of light mesons such as pion pairs,$ \rho $ and$ \omega $ . However, this has not yet been confirmed experimentally and relevant measurements are highly desirable. Currently, there is no experimental information that such an effect also exists for heavier quarks. It is of great importance to establish the existence of the universality in the strange and charm sectors as well. In particular, the investigation of charmonium$ (c\bar{c}) $ production in nSIDIS is of special interest as it provides valuable information on the gluon distribution in nucleus, which is completely unexplored. Together with the quark sector, study with the gluonic probe constitutes a crucial test of the universality of the SRC.The universality suggests the validity of the following relation in the kinematic region
$ X>1 $ , where the hadron production in the interaction of the virtual photon with mean-field nucleons becomes negligibly small and the main contribution to the cross section comes from the interaction with SRC:$ \begin{aligned}[b] &\quad\; (\sigma_{\gamma A\rightarrow \phi})/(\sigma_{\gamma D\rightarrow \phi})\big|_{X>1.2} \\ & = (\sigma_{\gamma A\rightarrow K^+K^-})/(\sigma_{\gamma D\rightarrow K^+K^-})\big|_{X>1.2} \\ & = (\sigma_{\gamma A\rightarrow J/\psi})/(\sigma_{\gamma D\rightarrow J/\psi})\big|_{X>1.2} \\ & = (\sigma_{\gamma A\rightarrow D^+D^-})/(\sigma_{\gamma D\rightarrow D^+D^-})\big|_{X>1.2}\\ & = (n^A_{\rm SRC}/A)/(n^D_{\rm SRC}/2) \\ & = \big[F^A_2 (X_{\rm B},Q^2)/A\big]/\big[F^D_2 (X_{\rm B},Q^2)/2\big]\big|_{1.4<X_{\rm B}<1.8}, \end{aligned} $
(5) where
$ (n^A_{\rm SRC}/A)/(n^D_{\rm SRC}/2) $ is the ratio of the nuclear scaling factors, and$ [F^A_2 (X_{\rm B},Q^2)/A]/[F^D_2 (X_{\rm B},Q^2)/2] $ is the ratio of the structure functions measured in DIS experiments with nuclear targets. Accounting for the center-of-mass motion of the correlated nucleon pair shifts the launch of the universality to$ X\approx1.2. $ In Refs. [22, 23], it was proposed to check the universality through the study of the deep subthreshold production of heavy flavors (
$ J/\psi $ and$ \Upsilon $ ) in$ \gamma A $ and$ eA $ collisions. The aforementioned exploration of strangeness and charm production in nSIDIS reactions beyond the kinematic region allowed for the study of the interaction of the virtual photon with nuclear nucleon carrying the normal Fermi momentum, thereby providing an alternative possibility to establish universality. A common feature of both approaches is that the SRC contribution to the production cross section becomes dominant both at$ X> 1 $ and at deep subthreshold energies.Note that the statement expressed by Eq. (5) may be distorted by the effect of the final state interactions (FSI). The role of these interactions in the processes with high energy-momentum transfers presents an unanswered question. Calculations within the Glauber approximation show that in nSIDIS
$ (e,e'2N) $ reactions for$Q^2 > $ $ 1.5 \;({\rm GeV}/c)^2$ and$ X_{\rm B}>1 $ , there exists interaction of secondary nucleons with one another rather than interaction with the nucleons of the nuclear residue$ A-2 $ [1, 24]. In nSIDIS kinematics at$ X>1 $ , the flavor of super fast quark (gluon) is "tagged" by detected hadron arising from quark fragmentation. Here, a nucleus serves as an effective femtometer-scale "detector" to probe the propagation, attenuation, and hadronization of colored quarks and gluons. Current experimental estimates of the color lifetime of energetic quarks vary from 2 to 8 fm/c [25, 26], which indicates parton propagation with a small cross section within a distance commensurable with the nucleus size. An analysis of the experimental data on the ratio of the cross sections$ \sigma_{pA\rightarrow pbar}/\sigma_{pBe\rightarrow pbar} $ , similar to those in Eq. (5), showed that in the region$ X>1 $ the absorption of antiprotons is insignificant in the nucleus up to aluminum, but becomes noticeable in the copper nucleus [26]. This suggests that the FSI effect in nuclei with mass number$ A\leqslant 27 $ can be neglected. The dependence of the cross section ratios on the lepton and hadronic variables in nSIDIS reactions might help to establish a kinematic range in which the influence of the final state interaction is irrelevant. For example, given that the color lifetime of fast quarks increases with an increase in X [26], an increase in X with an increase in the fraction of energy z transferred to the detected hadrons or hadron pairs in accordance with Eqs. (2) and (4) allows studying the deviation of the ratio (Eq. (5)) from universality by applying the appropriate cuts on z. The high luminosity of nuclear targets$ L \approx 10^{37}\; {\rm{s}}^{-1}{\rm{cm}}^{-2} $ makes it feasible to test Eq. (5) at the JLab 12 GeV, as well as in future experiments at electron-ion colliders in USA and especially in China (EicC).
Universality test of short range nucleon-nucleon correlations in nuclei with strange and charmed probes
- Received Date: 2021-08-09
- Available Online: 2022-01-15
Abstract: Understanding the EMC effect and its relation to the short-range nucleon-nucleon correlations (SRC) in nuclei is a major challenge for modern nuclear physics. One of the key aspects of the connection between these phenomena is the universality. The universality states that the SRC is responsible for the EMC effect and that the modification of the partonic structure of the SRC is the same in different nuclei. The flavor dependence of the universality is one of the unanswered questions. The investigations conducted to date have demonstrated the existence and universality of the SRC for light