What can we learn from polarized structure function data?
Author(s) -
Giovanni Ridolfi,
Guido Altarelli,
Richard D. Ball,
Stefano Forte
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.53674
Subject(s) - structure function , helicity , deep inelastic scattering , physics , particle physics , perturbative qcd , sum rule in quantum mechanics , scaling , deuterium , function (biology) , quantum chromodynamics , coupling (piping) , proton , neutron , nuclear physics , inelastic scattering , scattering , computer science , mathematics , optics , engineering , mechanical engineering , geometry , evolutionary biology , biology
We summarise the perturbative QCD analysis of the structure function data for g_1 from longitudinally polarized deep inelastic scattering from proton, deuteron and neutron targets, with particular emphasis on testing sum rules, determining helicity fractions, and extracting the strong coupling from both scaling violations and the Bjorken sum rule.We summarise the perturbative QCD analysis of the structure function data for g_1 from longitudinally polarized deep inelastic scattering from proton, deuteron and neutron targets, with particular emphasis on testing sum rules, determining helicity fractions, and extracting the strong coupling from both scaling violations and the Bjorken sum rule.We summarise the perturbative QCD analysis of the structure function data for g_1 from longitudinally polarized deep inelastic scattering from proton, deuteron and neutron targets, with particular emphasis on testing sum rules, determining helicity fractions, and extracting the strong coupling from both scaling violations and the Bjorken sum rule.We summarise the perturbative QCD analysis of the structure function data for g1 from longitudinally polarized deep inelastic scattering from proton, deuteron and neutron targets, with particular emphasis on testing sum rules, determining helicity fractions, and extracting the strong coupling from both scaling violations and the Bjorken sum rule
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