Title: Wigner Functions; PT-Dependent Factorization in SIDIS
1Wigner Functions PT-Dependent Factorization in
SIDIS
- Xiangdong Ji
- University of Maryland
COMPASS Workshop, Paris, March 1-3, 2004
2Outline
- Quantum phase-space (Wigner) distributions.
- GPD and phase-space picture of the nucleon.
- Transverse-momentum-dependent (TMD) parton
distributions. - Factorization theorem in semi-inclusive DIS.
- Single spin asymmetry transversity and the
connection between Collins, Sivers and
Efremov-Teryaev-Sterman-Qiu.
3Motivation
- Elastic form-factors provide static
coordinate-space charge and current distributions
(in the sense of Sachs, for example), but no
information on the dynamical motion. - Feynman parton densities give momentum-space
distributions of constituents, but no information
of the spatial location of the partons. - But sometimes, we need to know the position and
momentum of the constituents. - For example, one need to know r and p to
calculate Lrp !
4Phase-space Distribution?
- The state of a classical particle is specified
completely by its coordinate and momentum (x,p)
phase-space - A state of classical identical particle system
can be described by a phase-space distribution
f(x,p). - In quantum mechanics, because of the uncertainty
principle, the phase-space information is a
luxury, but - Wigner introduced the first phase-space
distribution in quantum mechanics (1932) - Heavy-ion collisions, quantum molecular dynamics,
signal analysis, quantum info, optics, image
processing
5Wigner function
- Define as
- When integrated over x (p), one gets the momentum
(probability) density. - Not positive definite in general, but is in
classical limit. - Any dynamical variable can be calculated as
Short of measuring the wave function, the Wigner
function contains the most complete (one-body)
info about a quantum system.
6Simple Harmonic Oscillator
N5
N0
Husimi distribution positive definite!
7Measuring Wigner function of a quantum Light!
8Quarks in the Proton
- Wigner operator
- Wigner distribution density for quarks having
position r and 4-momentum k? (off-shell)
a la Saches
Ji (2003)
7-dimensional distribtuion
No known experiment can measure this!
9Custom-made for high-energy processes
- In high-energy processes, one cannot measure k?
(k0kz) and therefore, one must integrate this
out. - The reduced Wigner distribution is a function of
6 variables r,k(k k?). - After integrating over r, one gets
transverse-momentum dependent (TDM) parton
distributions. - Alternatively, after integrating over k?, one
gets a spatial distribution of quarks with fixed
Feynman momentum k(k0kz)xM. -
f(r,x)
10Proton images at a fixed x
- For every choice of x, one can use the Wigner
distribution to picture the quarks This is
analogous to viewing the proton through the x
(momentum) filters! - The distribution is related to Generalized parton
distributions (GPD) through
t q2 ? qz
11A GPD or Wigner Function Model
- A parametrization which satisfies the following
Boundary Conditions (A. Belitsky, X. Ji, and F.
Yuan, hep-ph/0307383, to appear in PRD) - Reproduce measured Feynman distribution
- Reproduce measured form factors
- Polynomiality condition
- Positivity
- Refinement
- Lattice QCD
- Experimental data
12Up-Quark Charge Density at x0.4
z
y
x
13Up-Quark Charge Denstiy at x0.01
14Up-Quark Density At x0.7
15Comments
- If one puts the pictures at all x together, one
gets a spherically round nucleon! (Wigner-Eckart
theorem) - If one integrates over the distribution along the
z direction, one gets the 2D-impact parameter
space pictures of M. Burkardt (2000) and Soper.
16TMD Parton Distribution
- Appear in the process in which hadron
transverse-momentum is measured, often together
with TMD fragmentation functions. - The leading-twist ones are classified by Boer,
Mulders, and Tangerman (1996,1998) - There are 8 of them
- q(x, k-), qT(x, k-),
- ?qL(x, k-), ?qT(x, k-),
- dq(x, k-), dLq(x, k-), dTq(x, k-), dTq(x, k-)
17UV Scale-dependence
- The ultraviolet-scale dependence is very simple.
It obeys an evolution equation depending on the
anomalous dimension of the quark field in the
vA0 gauge. - However, we know the integrated parton
distributions have a complicated scale-dependence
(DGLAP-evolution) - Additional UV divergences are generated through
integration over transverse-momentum, which
implies that - ?µ d2k- q(x, k-) ? q(x,µ)
-
18Consistency of UV Regularization
- Feynman parton distributions are available in the
scheme dimensional regularization, minimal
subtraction. - This cannot be implemented for TMD parton
distributions because d4 before the
transverse-momentum is integrated. - On the other hand, it is difficult to implement a
momentum cut-off scheme for gauge theories - ( I love to have one for many other reasons!)
- Therefore, it is highly nontrivial that
- ? d2k- q(x, k-) ? Fey. Dis. known
from fits?
19Gauge Invariance?
- Can be made gauge-independent by inserting a
gauge link going out to infinity in some
direction v (in non-singular gauges). - In singular gauges, the issue is more complicated
- Ji Yuan (2003) conjectured a link at infinity
to reproduce the SSA in a model by Brodsky et.
al. - Belitsky, Ji Yuan (2003) derived the gauge link
- Boer, Mulders, and Pijlman (2003) implications
for real processes - If the link is not along the light-cone (used by
Collins and Soper, and others). The integration
over k- does not recover the usual parton
distribution.
20Evolution In Gluon Rapidity
- The transverse momentum of the quarks can be
generated by soft gluon radiation. As the energy
of the nucleon becomes large, more gluon
radiation (larger gluon rapidity) contributes to
generate a fixed transverse-momentum. - The evolution equation in energy or gluon
rapidity has been derived by Collins and Soper
(1981), but is non-perturbative if k-, is small.
21Factorization for SIDIS with P-
- For traditional high-energy process with one hard
scale, inclusive DIS, Drell-Yan, jet
production,soft divergences typically cancel,
except at the edges of phase-space. - At present, we have two scales, Q and P- (could
be soft). Therefore, besides the collinear
divergences which can be factorized into TMD
parton distributions (not entirely as shown by
the energy-dependence), there are also soft
divergences which can be taken into account by
the soft factor. - X. Ji, F. Yuan, and J. P. Ma (to be published)
22Example I
q
p'
k
p
Four possible regions of gluon momentum k 1) k
is collinear to p (parton dis) 2) k is
collinear to p' (fragmentation) 3) k is soft
(wilson line) 4) k is hard (pQCD correction)
23Example II
q
p'
k
p
The dominating topology is the quark carrying
most of the energy and momentum 1) k is
collinear to p (parton dis) 2) k is collinear
to p' (fragmentation) 3) k is soft (Wilson
line)
The best-way to handle all these is the
soft-collinear effective field theory (Bauer,
Fleming, Steward,)
24A general leading region in non-singular gauges
Ph
Ph
J
H
H
s
J
P
P
25Factorization theorem
- For semi-inclusive DIS with small pT
- Hadron transverse-momentum is generated from
- multiple sources.
- The soft factor is universal matrix elements of
Wilson - lines and spin-independent.
- One-loop corrections to the hard-factor has been
- calculated
26Sudakov double logs and soft radiation
- Soft-radiation generates the so-called Sudakov
double logarithms ln2Q2/p2T and makes the hadrons
with small-pT exponentially suppressed. - Soft-radiation tends to wash out the (transverse)
spin effects at very high-energy, de-coupling the
correlation between spin and transverse-momentum. - Soft-radiation is calculable at large pT
27What is a Single Spin Asymmetry (SSA)?
- Consider scattering of a transversely-polarized
spin-1/2 hadron (S, p) with another hadron (or
photon), observing a particle of momentum k
k
p
p
S
The cross section can have a term depending on
the azimuthal angle of k
which produce an asymmetry AN when S flips SSA
28Why Does SSA Exist?
- Single Spin Asymmetry is proportional to
- Im (FN FF)
- where FN is the normal helicity amplitude
- and FF is a spin flip amplitude
- Helicity flip one must have a reaction mechanism
for the hadron to change its helicity (in a cut
diagram). - Final State Interactions (FSI) to general a
phase difference between two amplitudes. - The phase difference is needed because the
structure - S (p k) formally violate time-reversal
invariance.
29Parton Orbital Angular Momentum and Gluon Spin
- The hadron helicity flip can be generated by
other mechanism in QCD - Quark orbital angular momentum (OAM) the quarks
have transverse momentum in hadrons. Therefore,
the hadron helicity flip can occur without
requiring the quark helicity flip. -
Beyond the naïve parton model in which quarks are
collinear
30Novel Way to Generate Phase
Coulomb gluon
Some propagators in the tree diagrams go on-shell
No loop is needed to generate the phase!
Efremov Teryaev 1982 1984 Qiu Sterman
1991 1999
31Single Target-Spin Asymmetry in SIDIS
- Observed in HERMES exp.
- At low-Pt, this can be generated from Sivers
distribution function and Collins fragmentation
function (twist-2). - At large-Pt, this can be generated from
Efremov-Taryaev-Qiu-Sterman (ETQS) effect
(twist-3). - Boer, Mulders, and Pijlman (2003) observed that
the moments of Sivers function is related to the
twist-3 matrix elements of ETQS.
32Low P- Factorization
- If P- is on the order of the intrinsic
transverse-momentum of the quarks in the nucleon.
Then the factorization theorem involved
un-integrated transversity distribution,
- One can measure the un-integrated transversity
- To get integrated one, one can integrate out P-
- with p- weighted. (soft factor disappears)
33When P- is large
- Soft factor produces most of the
transverse-momentum, and it can be lumped to hard
contribution. - The transverse-momentum in the parton
distribution can be integrated over, yielding the
transversity distribution. Or when the momentum
is large, it can be factorized in terms of the
transversity distribution. - The transverse-momentum in the Collins
fragmentation function can also be integrated
out, yielding the ETSQ twist-three fragmentation
matrix elements. Or when the momentum is large,
it can be factorized in terms of the transversity
distribution. - Likewise for Sivers effect.
- The SSA is then a twist-three observable.
34Physics of a Sivers Function
- Hadron helicity flip
- This can be accomplished through non-perturbative
mechanics (chiral symmetric breaking) in hadron
structure. - The quarks can be in both s and p waves in
relativistic quark models (MIT bag). - FSI (phase)
- The hadron structure has no FSI phase, therefore
Sivers function vanish by time-reversal (Collins,
1993) - FSI can arise from the scattering of jet with
background gluon field in the nucleon (collins,
2002) - The resulting gauge link is part of the parton
dis.
35Conclusion
- GPDs are quantum phase-space distributions, and
can be used to visualize 3D quark distributions
at fixed Feynman momentum - There is now a factorization theorem for
semi-inclusive hadron production at low pt, which
involves soft gluon effects, allowing study pQCD
corrections systematically. - According to the theorem, what one learns from
SSA at low pt is unintegrated transversity
distribution. - At large pt, SSA is a twist-three effects, the
factorization theorem reduces to the result of
Efremov-Teryaev-Qiu-Sterman.