Title: Hard QCD in pp Collisions at RHIC
1Hard QCD in pp Collisions at RHIC
ECT Workshop on Hard QCD with Antiprotons at GSI
FAIR
- Carl A. Gagliardi
- Texas AM University
- Outline
- Unpolarized pp collisions
- Longitudinally polarized pp collisions
- Transversely polarized pp collisions
- Looking ahead
2RHIC the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
- Search for and study the Quark-Gluon Plasma
- Explore the partonic structure of the proton
- Determine the partonic structure of nuclei
3Unpolarized pp collisions at RHIC
- Baseline physics!
- pp collisions provide an essential baseline to
determine whats new in heavy-ion collisions - Unpolarized pp collisions establish the
applicability of pQCD to interpret results from
polarized pp collisions - Unpolarized pp collisions constrain the
non-perturbative inputs for pQCD calculations
4Mid-rapidity p0 production at RHIC
PRL 91, 241803
- Data favor the KKP fragmentation function over
Kretzer - Mid-rapidity p0 cross section at 200 GeV is well
described by pQCD over 8 orders of magnitude
5Forward p0 production at ISR energies
Bourrely and Soffer, EPJ C36, 371
NLO pQCD calculations underpredict the data
at low ?s from ISR Ratio appears to be a
function of angle and vs, in addition to pT
6Forward pp ? p0 X cross sections at 200 GeV
PRL 97, 152302
- The error bars are statistical plus
point-to-point systematic - Consistent with NLO pQCD calculations at 3.3 lt ?
lt 4.0 - Data at low pT trend from KKP fragmentation
functions toward Kretzer.
NLO pQCD calculations by Vogelsang, et al.
7Mid-rapidity protons and charged pions
PLB 637, 161
- pQCD calculations with AKK fragmentation
functions give a reasonable description of pion
and proton yields in elementary collisions - Calculations with KKP significantly underestimate
proton yields at high-pT - Protons arise primarily from gluon fragmentation
pions receive a large quark contribution at
high-pT
8Forward rapidity p, K, p
PRL 98, 252001
- Charged pion and kaon yields at forward rapidity
are described reasonably by a modified KKP
fragmentation function - AKK seriously misses the forward
antiproton/proton ratio (expects 1, see 0.05
above 2 GeV/c) - KKP underestimates the ppbar yield by a factor
of 10
9From tests to tools
de Florian et al, PRD 75, 114010
- RHIC data now provide important constraints for
global analyses of pion fragmentation functions
10Kaon fragmentation functions
de Florian et al, PRD 75, 114010
- Also introducing important new constraints for
kaon fragmentation functions
11Proton fragmentation functions
de Florian et al, arXiv0707.1506
- Mid-rapidity STAR data are the best constraint
on the gluon fragmentation function into protons
at large z - Large BRAHMS forward proton to anti-proton excess
remains an open question
12What about fundamental objects?
PRL 98, 012002
- The direct photon yield is well described by pQCD
13Jets
PRL 97, 252001
- Jet structure at 200 GeV is well understood
- Mid-rapidity jet cross section is well described
by pQCD over 7 orders of magnitude
14Partonic structure of the proton
- HERA data provide very strong constraints on
unpolarized PDFs - Much less polarized DIS data over a limited Q2
region - Gluon and sea-quark polarizations largely
unconstrained by DIS
15Origin of the proton spin?
Polarized DIS 0.20.3
Poorly Constrained
Leader et al, hep-ph/0612360 ?G 0.13 0.16 ?G
0.006 ?G -0.20 0.41
- RHIC Spin program
- Longitudinal polarization Gluon polarization
distribution - Transverse polarization Parton orbital motion
and transversity - Down the road Anti-quark polarization
16RHIC the worlds first polarized hadron collider
- Spin varies from rf bucket to rf bucket (9.4 MHz)
- Spin pattern changes from fill to fill
- Spin rotators provide flexibility for STAR and
PHENIX measurements - Billions of spin flips during a fill with
little if any depolarization
17Inclusive ALL measurements (?0, ?, and jets)
For most RHIC kinematics, gg and qg dominate,
making ALL sensitive to gluon polarization.
18Predicted sensitivity for different ?G scenarios
Calculations by W. Vogelsang
Sampled x range for inclusive jets
- Jets (STAR) and p0 (PHENIX and STAR) easier
- ? and ALL(p) - ALL(p-) sensitive to the sign of
?G - Inclusive measurements average over broad x ranges
19STAR jets from Runs 34PRL 97, 252001
Gluon polarization is not really big (GRSV-max
CL 0.02)
20Charged pions from Run 5
p
p-
21STAR neutral pions from Run 5
?z? ? Mean ratio of ?0 pT to Jet pT
p0
- ALL disfavors large (positive) gluon polarization
- Energetic p0 carry a significant fraction of the
total transverse momentum of their associated jet
22PHENIX neutral pions from Run 5arXiv0704.3599
- ?2 from a comparison to the GRSV polarized parton
distributions - Uncertainties associated with GRSV functional
form not included - Large positive polarizations excluded large
negative polarizations disfavored
23STAR jets from Run 5
?g g (max) ?g -g (min) ?g 0 GRSV-STD
2005 STAR preliminary
- CL from a comparison to the GRSV polarized parton
distributions - Uncertainties associated with GRSV functional
form not included - Large positive polarizations excluded large
negative polarizations disfavored - Uncertainties from Run 6 will be a factor of 3
smaller at high pT
24PHENIX p0 from Run 6
- Preliminary Run 6 ?2 comparison, including
statistical uncertainties only (syst. are
expected to be small) - Its looking like ?G is quite small or negative
25Single-spin asymmetries at forward rapidity
PRL 92, 171801
- Large single-spin asymmetries at CM energies of
20 and 200 GeV - Werent supposed to be there in naïve pQCD
- May arise from the Sivers effect, Collins effect,
or a combination
26Transverse momentum dependent distributions exist
SIDIS can distinguish transverse motion
preferences in PDFs (Sivers) vs. fragmentation
fcns. (Collins)
HERMES results ? both non-zero. ? vs. ?
differences suggest opposite signs for u and d
quarks.
27Sivers effect in di-jet production
J. Balewski (IUCF)
Sivers effect
Sivers ON
spin
?1
- Left/right asymmetry in the kT of the partons in
a polarized proton - Spin dependent sideways boost to di-jets
- Requires parton orbital angular momentum
? gt 180? for kTx gt 0
di-jet bisector
kTx
?2
28Sivers di-jet measurementarXiv0705.4629
Mostly z beam quark -z beam gluon
- Measure the di-jet opening angle as a function of
proton spin - Both beams polarized, xa ? xb ? pseudorapidity
dependence can distinguish q vs. g Sivers effects.
29Sivers di-jet measurementarXiv0705.4629
- Observed asymmetries are an order of magnitude
smaller than seen in semi-inclusive DIS by HERMES - Detailed cancellations of initial vs. final state
effects and u vs. d quark effects?
30BRAHMS forward rapidity pion measurements at 200
GeV
2.3 deg (?3.4)
4 deg (?3)
- Sign dependence of charged pion asymmetries seen
in FNAL E704 persists to 200 GeV
31Additional BRAHMS forward rapidity results at 200
GeV
2.3 deg (?3.4)
- Charged kaon AN both positive slightly smaller
or comparable to p - Antiprotons show a sizable positive AN
- Protons show little asymmetry
32BRAHMS results at 62.4 GeV
Combined results from 2.3 and 3 deg
- Lower beam energy
- Larger xF
- Very large asymmetries!
Limitation of the BRAHMS measurements Very
strong correlation between xF and pT from small
acceptance
33Inclusive forward ?? asymmetry, AN
Data
Theory
Kouvaris et al, hep-ph/0609238
Decreasing ? Increasing pT
The data show exactly the opposite behavior
34AN(pT) in xF-bins
- Combined data from three runs
- at lt?gt3.3, 3.7 and 4.0
- In each xF bin, ltxFgt does not
- significantly changes with pT
- Measured AN is not a smooth
- decreasing function of pT
- as predicted by theoretical
- models
Kouvaris et al, hep-ph/0609238
35Separating Sivers and Collins effects
Collins mechanism asymmetry in the forward jet
fragmentation
Sivers mechanism asymmetry in the forward jet or
? production
SP
SP
kT,q
p
p
p
p
Sq
kT,p
Sensitive to proton spin parton transverse
motion correlations
Sensitive to transversity
- Need to go beyond inclusive p0 to measurements of
jets or direct ? - Have some Run 6 data under analysis
- Will study in Run 8 with the STAR Forward Meson
Spectrometer
36STAR Forward Meson Spectrometer
South half of FMS array during assembly
- Pb glass calorimeter covering 2.5 lt ? lt 4
- Detect direct photons, jets, di-jets, .. in
addition to p0, for kinematics where p0
single-spin asymmetries are known to be large
37Looking beyond inclusive ALL measurements
- Inclusive ALL measurements at fixed pT average
over a broad x range. - Need a global analysis to determine the
implications - Can hide considerable structure if ?G(x) has a
node
38The next few years ?G(x)
STAR (pre-)preliminary
2005 Data Simulation
- Di-jets access LO parton kinematics
- Involve a mixture of qq, qg, and gg scattering
39? jet events
- ? jet provides very good event-by-event
determination of the parton kinematics - 90 of the yield arises from qg scattering
- Can choose the kinematics to maximize the
sensitivity to ?G(x)
40Down the road anti-quark polarization
- With two polarized beams and W and W-, can
separate u, d, u, d polarizations - These simulations are for the PHENIX muon arms
- STAR will do this with electrons
- Need 500 GeV collisions at high luminosity, and
upgrades to both PHENIX and STAR
41Further future spin measurements in the RHIC II
era
Direct measurement of the ?s, ?s contributions in
charm-tagged W boson production
Sivers asymmetry AN for Drell-Yan di-muon and
di-electron production
42Conclusion
- pp collisions at RHIC are providing important new
inputs for our understanding of fragmentation
functions - The worlds first polarized hadron collider is
generating a wealth of new data regarding the
spin structure of the proton - Weve only barely started!
43(No Transcript)
44Subtleties of Jet Analysis Trigger Bias
- High Tower and Jet Patch triggers require
substantial fraction of jet energy in neutral
hadrons - Trigger efficiency turns on slowly above nominal
threshold - Efficiency differs for quark vs. gluon jets, due
to different fragmentation features - Simulations reproduce measured bias well, except
for beam background at extreme EM energy fraction
- Conclude
- Cut out jets at very high or very low EMF
- Use simulations to estimate syst. errors from
trigger bias