Imaging the nucleus with high-energy photons
Spencer R. Klein, Heikki Mantysaari

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in high-energy nuclear imaging, highlighting how electron-ion colliders can provide detailed multi-dimensional pictures of quark and gluon distributions within nuclei.
Contribution
It summarizes recent experimental progress and discusses future prospects of high-energy imaging of nuclear structure with electron-ion colliders.
Findings
Alterations in quark and gluon densities in heavy nuclei
Development of multi-dimensional nuclear images
Potential of future colliders to resolve nuclear substructure
Abstract
In the 1930's, nuclear physicists developed the first realistic atomic models, showing that nuclei were made up of protons and neutrons. In the 1960's, Deep Inelastic Scattering experiments showed that protons and neutrons had internal structure: quarks and gluons (collectively, partons), and later experiments showed that the parton momentum distributions are different in heavy nuclei, compared to those in free nucleons. This difference is not surprising; partons are sensitive to their environment, and two gluons from different nucleons may fuse together, for example. Understanding how quarks and gluons behave in the nuclear environment is a significant focus of modern nuclear physics. Recent measurements have provided us with an improved understanding of how quark and gluon densities are altered in heavy nuclei. We have also begun to make multi-dimensional pictures of the nucleus,…
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