We present a new proposal to study the helicity-dependent dihadron fragmentation functions (DiFF), which describe the correlations of the longitudinal polarization of a fragmenting quark with the transverse momenta of the produced hadron pair. Recent experimental searches for this DiFF via azimuthal asymmetries in back-to-back hadron pair production in e^{+}e^{-} annihilation by the BELLE Collaboration did not yield a signal. Here we propose a new way to access this DiFF in e^{+}e^{-} annihilation, motivated by the recently recalculated cross section of this reaction, which explains why there was in fact no signal for the BELLE Collaboration to see. In this new approach the azimuthal asymmetry is weighted by the virtual photon's transverse momentum square multiplying sine and cosine functions of difference of azimuthal angles of relative and total momentum for each pair. The integration over the virtual photon's transverse momentum has the effect of separating the convolution between the helicity-dependent DiFFs in the quark and antiquark jets and results in a nonzero collinear expression containing Fourier moments of helicity-dependent DiFFs. A second new measurement is also proposed for two-hadron production in semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering, where the asymmetry is weighted in a similar way for a single pair. This results in a collinear factorized form of the asymmetry, which includes the quark helicity parton distribution function and the same helicity-dependent DiFF, as in e^{+}e^{-} production and will allow us to check the universality of this DiFF.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.120.252001 | DOI Listing |
Phys Rev Lett
June 2023
University of California-Riverside, Riverside, California 92521, USA.
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October 2022
QMAP, Department of Physics, University of California, Davis, California 95616, USA.
We suggest a novel resolution for a decades old mystery-what happens when a positron scatters off a minimal grand-unification-theory monopole in an s wave, a puzzle first discussed by Callan in 1983. Using the language of on shell amplitudes and pairwise helicity we suggest that the final state contains two up quarks and a down quark in an entangled "pairwise" multiparticle state-the only particle final state that satisfies angular momentum and gauge charge conservation. The cross section for this process is as large as in the original Rubakov-Callan effect, only suppressed by the QCD scale.
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October 2021
University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, Anhui 230026, China.
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April 2021
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22901, USA.
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