4.7 Article

Mystery of Bloom-Gilman duality: A light-front holographic QCD perspective

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW D
Volume 103, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevD.103.096018

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics [DE-FG02-97ER-41014]
  2. Battelle Memorial Institute, Pacific Northwest Division Acting
  3. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC05-76RL01830]

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Light-front wave functions are used in studying Bloom-Gilman duality and presenting expressions for structure functions. A specific two-parton model is defined, and resonance transition form factors are computed using these wave functions. However, evaluations show that the global and local duality sum rules are not satisfied within the given model.
Light-front wave functions motivated by holographic constructions are used to study Bloom-Gilman duality, a feature of deep inelastic scattering. Separate expressions for structure functions in terms of quark and hadronic degrees of freedom (involving transition form factors) are presented, with an ultimate goal of obtaining a relationship between the two expressions. A specific two-parton model is defined and resonance transition form factors are computed using previously derived light-front wave functions. A new form of global duality (integral over all values of x between 0 and 1) is derived from the valence quark-number sum rule. Using a complete set of hadronic states is necessary for this new global duality to be achieved, and the previous original work does not provide such a set. This feature is remedied by amending the model to include a longitudinal confining potential, and the resulting complete set is sufficient to carry out the study of Bloom-Gilman duality. Specific expressions for transition form factors are obtained and all are shown to fall as 1/Q(2), at asymptotically large values. This is because the Feynman mechanism dominates the asymptotic behavior of the model. These transition form factors are used to assess the validity of the global and local duality sum rules, with the result that both are not satisfied within the given model. Evaluations of the hadronic expression for q(x, Q(2)) provide more details about this lack. This result is not a failure of the current model because it shows that the observed validity of both global and local forms of duality for deep inelastic scattering must be related to a feature of QCD that is deeper than completeness. Our simple present model suggests a prediction that Bloom-Gilman duality would not be observed if deep inelastic scattering experiments were to be made on the pion. The underlying origin of the duality phenomenon in deep inelastic scattering is deeply buried within the confinement aspects of QCD, and its origin remains a mystery.

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