QCD with Electron Ion Collider (QEIC) II

Asia/Kolkata
Lecture Hall Complex, LH-527 (Indian Institute of Technology Delhi)

Lecture Hall Complex, LH-527

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi Hauz Khas, New Delhi, Delhi 110016
Shuddha Shankar Dasgupta (National Institute of Science Education and Research, Bhubaneswar), Tobias Toll
Description

This will be the second in the series of workshops which aims to organise the Indian high energy and nuclear physics community around the EIC. The first was held in 2020 at IIT Bombay. With the recent forming of the ePIC collaboration, and as the EIC project approaches CD-2/3A, this will be a crucial meeting for solidifying and enhancing the participation and contributions of the Indian high energy and nuclear physics community in the EIC project. The Indian participation in the EIC now has 29 institutes and 63 members and is growing continually. EIC also finds a prominent place in India's soon to be released long-range planning document Mega Science Vision (MSV) 2035.

The Indian community has been actively involved with the ATHENA-EOI preparation and made significant contributions to the ongoing consolidation of EIC software and benchmarking. India has many institutes that potentially can participate in building ePIC detector components, such as PID, and has many theorists and phenomenologists who have a long history of keen interest in EIC physics. The EIC India group holds regular biweekly online meetings, this workshop will be an opportunity to meet in person again.

The workshop will be designed as three days of plenaries on the EIC Project and the ePIC detector with speakers from US, India and other collaborating nations, with plenty of room for discussions. One of the outcomes of this meeting is to arrive at a joint proposal from all Indian institutes for funding by Indian agencies for participation in EIC. 

Participants
  • ABHIRAM KAUSHIK BADRINARAYANAN
  • Abhishek Iyer
  • Ajay Kumar
  • Arjun Kumar
  • Arun Gupta
  • Bedangadas Mohanty
  • BHEEMSEHAN GURJAR
  • Chandan Mondal
  • Charles-Joseph NAÏM
  • Chitrasen Jena
  • Cho Win Aung
  • Elke-Caroline Aschenauer
  • Ibrahim Mirza
  • Jai Prakash
  • Jaswant singh
  • Jay Bhambure
  • Lokesh Kumar
  • Marius Utheim
  • Markus Diefenthaler
  • Mriganka Mouli Mondal
  • Narinder Kumar
  • Neetika Sharma
  • Niveditha Ramasubramanian
  • Pankaj Borah
  • Poonam Choudhary
  • Prabhakar Palni
  • Pratyusha Chatterjee
  • Raj Kishore
  • Ranjeet Dalal
  • Sabyasachi Ghosh
  • Saddam Hussain
  • Sadhana Dash
  • Samarth Jain
  • Shohini Bhattacharya
  • Swagato Mukherjee
  • Tanmay -
  • Tanmay Maji
  • Thandar Zaw Win
  • Tobias Toll
  • Vaishnavi Desai
  • Vikash Kumar Ojha
  • Zhoudunming Tu
  • +48
    • 1
      Registration
    • 2
      Welcome and inauguration
    • 3
      Overview of the EIC and the goals of this meeting
      Speaker: Abhay Deshpande (Stony Brook University)
    • 4
      The electron-ion collider -- A world wide unique collider to unravel the mysteries of visible matter

      Understanding the properties of nuclear matter and its emergence through the underlying partonic structure and dynamics of quarks and gluons requires a new experimental facility in hadronic physics known as the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC). The EIC will address some of the most profound questions concerning the emergence of nuclear properties by precisely imaging gluons and quarks inside protons and nuclei such as their distributions in space and momentum, their role in building the nucleon spin and the properties of gluons in nuclei at high energies. In January 2020 the EIC received CD-0 and Brookhaven National Laboratory was selected as site, and June 2021 CD-1. This presentation will give highlights on the EIC experimental program, introduce the experimental equipment and its integration into the accelerator and give the status of the EIC project, as well what are the next major steps. How contributing to the experimental program will be highlighted.

      Speaker: Elke Aschenauer (BNL)
    • 10:45
      Tea/Coffee break
    • 5
      EIC Computing, overview and areas where India can contribute
      Speaker: Markus Diefenthaler (JLab)
    • 6
      EIC : Indian Status & possibilities of contribution
      Speakers: Bedanga Mohanty (NISER), Shuddha Dasgupta (NISER)
    • 7
      Discussion
      Speaker: Abhay Deshpande (Stony Brook University)
    • 13:05
      Lunch
    • 8
      Imagining Hadrons: Lattice QCD in the EIC Era

      To fully realize EIC's goal on 3-dimensional imaging of hadrons complementary lattice QCD results for PDF, GPD, TMD etc. are essential. This talk will provide an overview of some recent progresses in lattice QCD calculations of partonic structures of hadrons.

      Speaker: Swagato Mukherjee
    • 15:00
      Tea/Coffee break
    • 9
      Detailed Project Report Discussion
      Speaker: Bedanga Mohanty (NISER)
    • 18:00
      Reception
    • 10
      Transverse single spin asymmetry at two loops

      This talk is mostly based on our recent work [1] where we numerically compute transverse single spin asymmetry (SSA) in SIDIS based on a new mechanism suggested in [2]. In this mechanism, the phase required for the asymmetry is generated from higher order diagrams. Specifically in [2] it was demonstrated that with the $g_T(x)$ quark distribution for the transversely polarized proton, a non-zero STSA appears first at two-loops. In our work, we also included an analogous gluon-initiated contribution arising from the $G_{3T}(x)$ distribution. In our framework, both $g_T(x)$ and $G_{3T}(x)$ were considered in the Wilczek-Wandzura (WW) approximation, i.e., as integrals of the quark and gluon helicity distributions respectively. Hence these contributions to the asymmetry can be evaluated unambiguously without inputs from unknown parameters such as dynamical twist-3 distributions. Overall, we are using a collinear framework appropriate for high $p_T$ hadron production, so our results serve as predictions for the planned Electron Ion Collider (EIC). We find that the asymmetry associated with the $\sin(\phi_h - \phi_S)$, $\sin(\phi_S)$ and $\sin(2\phi_h-\phi_S)$ harmonics can reach up to $1$-$2\%$ at the EIC. Further I will also discuss our recent calculations [3] which extend this mechanism to hadron and direct photon production in forward pp collisions and present numerical estimates for them. We find that while the SSA for forward hadron production production is rather small, the asymmetry for direct photon production can reach upto $1\%$ in the very forward regions at small values of $p_T$ ($1$-$2$ GeV). In general our results for SIDIS and pp collisions should be understood as parts of the respective NLO computations that would be indispensable for a quantitative assessment of SSA.

      [1] S. Benić, Y. Hatta, A. K, H-n. Li, Phys. Rev. D 104 (2021), 094027
      [2] S. Benić, Y. Hatta, H-n. Li, D.-J. Yang, Phys. Rev. D 100 (2019) 9, 094027
      [3] S. Benić, Y. Hatta, A. K, H-n. Li, in preparation

      Speaker: Abhiram Kaushik (University of Zagreb)
    • 11
      Quark and gluon spin and orbital angular momentum in the proton : A light-front Hamiltonian approach

      There is a well-known crisis: one of the fundamental properties of the proton, its spin, is not the same as the sum of its constituent quark spins. The gluon’s contribution to the proton spin is nonvanishing and likely sizable. Yet, there remain large uncertainties about the gluon’s contribution and resolving this issue is one of the major goals of the upcoming Electron-Ion-Colliders. We address this fundamental issue with a fully relativistic and nonperturbative approach based on a light-front quantized Hamiltonian with Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) input. From this, we calculate the effects from incorporating a dynamical gluon on the proton’s gluon densities, helicity distribution and orbital angular momentum that constitutes the proton spin sum rule. We predict about 26% of the proton’s spin is carried by the gluon’s helicity and about 1.3% by its orbital angular momentum in low-momentum transfer experiments. Our approach also provides a good quality description of the proton’s quark distribution functions following QCD scale evolution.

      Speaker: Chandan Mondal
    • 12
      Gluon helicity distributions in the proton from holographic light-front QCD

      In 1988 the European Muon Collaboration (EMC) at CERN shocked the physics community by announcing that the sum of the spins of the three quarks that make up the proton is much less than the spin of the proton itself, later on which is known so-called "proton spin puzzle". Physicists have been unable to answer a seemingly simple question: where does proton spin come from? How the proton’s spin originates from its constituents like quarks and gluons and their interactions, which are regulated by quantum chromodynamics (QCD), is a key issue in nuclear and particle physics. In order to address this issue, the spin sum rules divide the proton’s spin into its quark and gluon spin and angular momentum components. The quark and gluon spin components come from the parton distribution functions, while the orbital angular momenta are related to the Generalized Parton Distribution functions (GPDs). So basically in this talk, I will address the individual contributions to the proton spin from all the constituents. In particular, we will look at two different types of decompositions of the proton spin: (1) the non-gauge invariant Jaffee-Manohar decomposition, and (2) the gauge invariant decomposition proposed by Ji.

      Speaker: BHEEMSEHAN GURJAR (Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur)
    • 10:45
      Tea/Coffee break
    • 13
      Diffractive Vector Meson production using Sartre with Machine Learning

      We use Machine Learning with an event-generator (Sar$t$re) for
      the process: $e \p\rightarrow e'\ p' \ V_M $, $e \ A\rightarrow e'\ A' \ V_M $ .
      Sar$t$re uses 3-dimensional look-up tables to generate events
      in which the first two moments of the Amplitude are stored. In eA collisions the generation of these lookup tables takes many months. I will present a method, using neural networks, which reduces the computing time by up to 90%. This will be important for doing simulations in the ongoing preparations for the electron-ion collider.

      Speaker: Jaswant Singh (Indian Institute of Technology New Delhi)
    • 14
      Towards electron-ion event generation in Pythia

      General-purpose event generators such as Pythia are programs that model complete particle interactions, including the hard process, parton showers, multiparton interactions, hadronization, etc. The objective of these generators is to provide state-of-the-art predictions for high energy collisions, and are essential for bridging the gap between theoretical models and experimental data. Pythia also includes the Angantyr framework for heavy ion collisions. One of the long-term goals of the Pythia collaboration is to extend this framework to electron-ion collisions.

      In this talk, I present our initial work towards this goal. In this first step, we consider vector meson dominance (VMD) processes where the interaction is initiated by a photon that fluctuates into a vector meson, i.e. processes that are essentially hadronic interactions. These interactions will be implemented for both photon-proton, as well as photon-ion via the Angantyr framework, and are relevant for modelling the resolved state of a low-virtuality photon. We compare the results to full photoproduction in photon-proton.

      Speaker: Marius Utheim
    • 15
      LHeC prospects
      Speaker: Soureek Mitra (KIT - Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (DE))
    • 13:00
      Lunch
    • 16
      Angularity event shape for DIS in Soft-Collinear Effective Theory (SCET)

      One of the classic ways of studying QCD events in high-energy experiments is to measure the Event Shape variables e.g., Thrust, Jet Broadening, Angularity etc. which are observables designed to characterize several properties including the geometric shape of hadron distribution in the event. In this talk, we will discuss a more general global event shape "angularity" for deep inelastic scattering process (DIS), eP -> dijet, in the framework of Soft-Collinear Effective Theory (SCET) and give precision prediction to the DIS angularity cross-section for future Electron-Ion-Collider(EIC) at next-to-next-to-leading log (NNLL) accuracy. The talk is mostly based on our recent publication JHEP11(2021)026.

      Angularity is a class of event-shape observables that can be measured in
      deep-inelastic scattering (EIC at BNL). With its continuous parameter 'a' one can interpolate angularity between thrust and broadening and further access beyond the region. Providing such a systematic way to access various observables makes angularity attractive in analysis with event shapes. We give the definition of angularity for DIS and factorize the cross-section by using the soft-collinear effective theory. The factorization is valid in a wide range of below and above thrust regions but invalid in broadening limits. It contains an angularity beam function, which is the new result, and we give the expression at O(αs). We also perform large log resummation of angularity and make predictions at various values of 'a' at next-to-next-to-leading log accuracy.

      Speaker: Tanmay Maji (IIT Hyderabad, Hyderabad, India)
    • 17
      Probing gluon orbital angular momentum through exclusive dijet production at the EIC

      By considering double spin asymmetry (DSA) in exclusive dijet production in $ep$ collisions, we demonstrate for the first time that the $cos(\phi)$ angular correlation between the scattered electron and proton is a direct probe of the gluon orbital angular momentum and its interplay with the gluon helicity. We also make an estimate of the DSA for typical kinematics of the future Electron Ion Collider.

      Speaker: Shohini Bhattacharya (Brookhaven National Laboratory)
    • 15:30
      Tea/Coffee break
    • 18
      Accessing linearly polarized gluon TMD in back-to-back $J/\psi$ and jet production at the EIC

      We present a calculation of the $\cos2\phi$ azimuthal asymmetry in $e ~p\rightarrow e ~J/\psi ~Jet~ X$, where $J/\psi-Jet$ pair is almost back-to-back in the transverse plane, within the framework of the generalized parton model (GPM) and assuming TMD factorization. This probes the Weisz{\"a}ker-Williams type linearly polarized gluon distribution. We calculate the asymmetry using non-relativistic QCD (NRQCD) for the production of $J/\psi$ incorporating both color singlet and color octet contributions. We study the dependence of the asymmetry on the parametrizations of the gluon TMDs used, as well as the impact of TMD evolution on the asymmetry. We present numerical estimates in the kinematical regions to be accessed by
      the future EIC.

      Speaker: Amol Pawar
    • 19
      Nuclear matter study at sPHENIX experiment

      We propose in this talk to investigate the QCD dynamics at sPHENIX experiment through two studies:

      First, the internal jet structure study provides information about the hadronization process in non-perturbative QCD dynamics. The non-perturbative flavor correlation between pairs of leading and next-to-leading charged hadrons is proposed. The correlation ratio observable $r_{c}$ for protons, kaons and pions for various kinematic variables is investigated.

      Second, the Drell-Yan (DY) process is also discussed as a probe of transport properties of the cold nuclear matter (CNM). The DY events extraction involves a precise knowledge of QCD background participating in the dilepton invariant mass spectrum. A fit of this one, including open-charm, open-bottom, charmonium and bottomonium simulations, is shown. CNM effects are investigated via the rapidity (y) and transverse momentum ($p_{\perp}$) distributions of the DY dilepton pair.

      Speaker: Charles Joseph Naim
    • 20
      The initial gluon profile: lessons from exclusive diffraction
      Speaker: Tobias Toll
    • 21
      Probing the gluonic structure of pions with tagged DIS (TDIS)

      Tagged-DIS (TDIS) provides a unique opportunity to study the structure of targets which are not readily available. One can study the longitudinal pion structure in a semi-inclusive measurement by measuring the leading neutrons in the far forward direction in addition to the scattered electron in the usual DIS. Theoretically, in the so-called Sullivan process, the cross section in these events is given as a product of a chiral splitting function (proton to neutron + pion) and the structure function of the (nearly on-shell) exchanged pion. We performed a phenomenological study of the predictions of dipole models in leading neutron DIS at high energy. Our investigations hint toward a universal longitudinal structure of pions and protons at high energy. On the other hand, extending the study to exclusive vector meson production with leading neutrons provides the pathway to investigate the spatial extent of the pion cloud and gluon distribution of pions.

      Speaker: Arjun Kumar (Indian Institute of Technology Delhi)
    • 22
      Exclusive Diffraction with the EPIC detector

      One of the golden measurements at the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) is to measure the coherent diffractive Vector-Meson (VM) production off heavy nuclei. The measurement is expected to be sensitive to the non-linear gluon dynamics - saturation, and most importantly, it also provides the gluon density distribution of the nucleus. While the measurement was established in the EIC White Paper 10 years ago, it is not until recently that the experimental challenges of this measurement were realized. In this talk, I will discuss the physics motivation, key challenges associated with the measurement, and their potential solutions in the context of electron-gold collisions, including detector resolution and overwhelming background. Full simulations based on the most up-to-date EPIC detector design at the EIC will be presented.

      Speaker: Zhoudunming Tu
    • 11:00
      Tea/Coffee break
    • 23
      Sum rules for the Graviational Form Factors in light-front dressed quark model

      First, we give a brief overview of the light-front dressed quark model, per se,
      instead of a proton state, we use a simple composite spin-1/2 state that is a quark dressed with a gluon. It is a perturbative model and has gluonic degrees of freedom. Then we outline the formalism used to evaluate the gravitational
      form factors (GFFs) of quarks and gluons in a dressed quark model. We use
      the Hamiltonian framework and choose the light-front gauge such that the
      two-component formalism eliminates the constraint fields. We calculate the
      four GFFs and corroborate the sum rules that GFFs satisfy. Of the four GFFs,
      the D-term as we know is not related to any Poincare generator so it
      remains unconstrained. This D-term is attributed to information like
      pressure, shear, and energy distributions. So, we analyze these
      distributions for a quark state dressed with a gluon at one loop in QCD.

      Speaker: Jai More (INDIAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY BOMBAY)
    • 24
      Classical and Statistical Physics version of Proton’s pressure distribution

      Proton is our stable microscopic platform, allowing four forces - strong, electromagnetic, weak
      and gravity to act in terms of their respective form factors, where the gravitational form factors
      describe the hadron’s mass, spin, and D term. Recently, in 2018, the D term has been extracted
      from the experiment and pressure distribution inside the proton is sketched. The shocking part of
      this results is that the pressure near the center of the proton is crossing the value of neutron star
      pressure. Present work has attempted to understand this shocking pressure distribution in terms
      of a simple version of classical and statistical physics. This attempt does not claim about realistic
      explanation of proton pressure distribution but may be considered as crude visualization to compare
      our existing aspects of classical and statistical physics.

      Speaker: Sabyasachi Ghosh
    • 25
      Nucleon-nucleon correlations inside atomic nuclei: review of experimental observations

      There has been a steady flux of new experimental evidences confirming
      the presence of short-ranged structures inside atomic nuclei, dominated by correlations
      between pairs of nucleons. The role of these internal nucleon-nucleon correlations
      has been established using various energetic probes like photons, pions, leptons and
      hadrons. These correlated structures are essential for understanding the interaction
      of particles with nuclei and their presence provides an explanation of many specific

      nuclear phenomena including backscattered protons, copious deuteron production, sub-
      threshold particle production, neutrino interactions with nuclei and the EMC effect.

      We will highlight a wide range of different experimental studies in this area along with
      some specific suggetions for experimental observation of 3N correlation in upcoming
      EIC experiment.

      Speaker: Dr Ranjeet Dalal (Guru Jambheshwar University of Science and technology, Hisar)
    • 13:00
      Lunch
    • 26
      MC Net Monte Carlo school in India
      Speaker: Marius Utheim
    • 27
      Concluding Discussion
    • 15:20
      Tea/Coffee break