Short-range nuclear correlations at an Electron-Ion Collider

US/Eastern
CFNS Brookhaven Lab

CFNS Brookhaven Lab

Brookhaven National Laboratory
Abhay Deshpande (Stony Brook University), Dmitri Kharzeev (Stony Brook University and BNL), Jianwei Qiu (Brookhaven National Lab), Raju Venugopalan (BNL), Rik Yoshida (Jefferson Lab), Thomas Ullrich (BNL), Witold Nazarewicz (FRIB/MSU)
Description

An Electron-Ion Collider may provide an exceptionally fertile environment to study the dynamics of nuclei at short distances. A key goal is to understand the quark and gluon substructure of nucleons and nuclei, their role in nuclear binding and in general, in short-range nuclear correlations. Since the discovery of  the EMC effect, these studies have yielded many surprises and continuing puzzles, an example of which are the strong short-range nucleon-nucleon correlations discovered at Jlab. Results from RHIC and LHC on multiparticle correlations in light-heavy ion collisions indicate a larger than anticipated role of quark and gluon spatial correlations. An important question is how these studies can impact our understanding of nuclear structure and correlations across energy scales.

 The EIC brings new elements to these studies. The higher energies allow access to the gluon dominated regime in nucleons and nuclei; these, combined with high luminosities, permit highly differential studies of exclusive and diffractive final states. Beams of polarized light nuclei will permit extraction of the spin dependence of short-range forces. Not least, because the fragmentation of struck nuclei can be widely separated spatially from the fragmentation region of the lepton current, the EIC can in principle cleanly probe the distribution of nuclear fragments. Such measurements  pose significant challenges to the design of the detector and the interaction region at the EIC.

 A first one-day workshop exploring some of the ideas outlined was held in March 2017 at Catholic University of America in Washington DC. Because of the interest generated by this workshop, and on-going theoretical and experimental developments, it is timely to explore in greater depth the potential of EIC to reveal the underlying structure of short-range nuclear correlations in terms of the underlying quark and gluon fields of QCD. The workshop will bring together interested scientists from a diverse range of sub-fields of nuclear physics to discuss their perspectives on these issues. We envisage a program of a few overview presentations on key questions and puzzles, along with shorter focused presentations, and plenty of time reserved for discussions.

Event ID: 39112

    • 09:00 09:05
      Welcome Message 5m
      Speaker: Bob Tribble (BNL)
    • 09:05 09:15
      Brief recap of CUA Workshop 10m
      Speakers: Jianwei Qiu (JLab), Raju Venugopalan (BNL)
    • 09:15 09:55
      Short-range correlations: overview of recent results 40m
      Speaker: Or Hen
    • 09:55 10:35
      Perspectives on short-distance phenomena in nuclei 40m
      Speaker: James Vary
    • 10:35 10:55
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 10:55 11:35
      Quark-gluon dynamics of short-ranged nuclear correlations and how to observe it at the EIC 40m
      Speaker: Mark Strikman
    • 11:35 12:15
      Multi-particle correlations in collisions with small nuclei 40m
      Speaker: Bjoern Schenke
    • 12:15 13:30
      Lunch Break (on your own) 1h 15m
    • 13:30 14:10
      High-resolution probes of low-resolution nuclei 40m
      Speaker: Richard Furnstahl
    • 14:10 14:50
      Ab initio and empirical approaches to quantify short-range correlations in nuclei and nuclear matter 40m
      Speaker: Willem Dickhoff
    • 14:50 15:30
      Light-cone PDFs from Lattice QCD 40m
      Speaker: Martha Constantinou
    • 15:30 15:50
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 15:50 16:30
      Transverse motion of quarks in nuclei 40m
      Speaker: Ian Cloet
    • 16:30 17:10
      Nucleon and nucleon-pair correlations in A<=12 nuclei 40m
      Speaker: Robert Wiringa
    • 17:10 17:50
      Short-range correlations and the EMC effect in an EFT approach 40m
      Speaker: Jiunn-Wei Chen
    • 18:00 20:00
      Reception (Seminar Lounge in building 510, Physics Dept.) 2h

      Provided by CFNS

    • 09:00 09:40
      Light front wavefunctions of nucleons and nuclei and short-range correlations within 40m
      Speaker: Gerald Miller
    • 09:40 10:20
      Spectator tagging and bound nucleon structure at Jlab 40m
      Speaker: Lawrence Weinstein
    • 10:20 10:40
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 10:40 11:20
      From mean-field to short range correlated pairs 40m
      Speaker: Raphael Dupre
    • 11:20 12:00
      Deuteron GPDs in a covariant framework 40m
      Speaker: Adam Freese
    • 12:00 13:30
      Lunch Break (on your own) 1h 30m
    • 13:30 14:10
      Electron and neutrino scattering from correlated nucleon pairs 40m
      Speaker: Joe Carlson
    • 14:10 14:50
      Accessing the Wigner distribution in diffractive di-jet production 40m
      Speaker: Yoshitaka Hatta
    • 14:50 15:30
      Exploring short-range correlations effects with quantum Monte-Carlo and local chiral interactions 40m
      Speaker: Diego Lonardoni
    • 15:30 15:50
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 15:50 16:30
      SRCs @ EIC: Challenges in forward detection and simulation 40m
      Speaker: Mark Baker
    • 16:30 17:10
      Forward nucleon tagging at EIC 40m
      Speaker: J.H. Lee (Brookhaven National Laboratory)
    • 17:10 17:50
      Rare isotopes at the EIC 40m
      Speaker: Pawel Nadel-Turonski (Jefferson Lab)
    • 18:30 22:00
      Dinner (Atlantis Aquarium in Riverhead – Provided by CFNS) 3h 30m

      Atlantis Aquarium in Riverhead – Provided by CFNS

    • 09:00 09:40
      Extracting color charge form factors from exclusive DIS at large x 40m
      Speaker: Adrian Dumitru
    • 09:40 10:20
      Short-range interactions and multiparticle correlations in collisions of small systems 40m
      Speaker: Mark Mace
    • 10:20 10:40
      Coffee Break 20m
    • 10:40 11:20
      DIS on the deuteron with spectator tagging: Theory, applications, simulations 40m
      Speaker: Christian Weiss
    • 11:20 12:00
      Probing super-fast quarks in e+A processes 40m
      Speaker: Misak Sargsian
    • 12:00 12:15
      Homework problems 15m
      Speakers: Rik Yoshida, Thomas Ullrich
    • 12:15 12:25
      Concluding remarks 10m
      Speaker: Abhay Deshpande (Stony Brook University)