Science Requirements and Detector Concepts for the Electron-Ion Collider: EIC Yellow Report
R. Abdul Khalek, A. Accardi, J. Adam, D. Adamiak, W. Akers, M., Albaladejo, A. Al-bataineh, M. G. Alexeev, F. Ameli, P. Antonioli, N., Armesto, W. R. Armstrong, M. Arratia, J. Arrington, A. Asaturyan, M. Asai, E., C. Aschenauer, S. Aune, H. Avagyan, C. Ayerbe Gayoso, B. Azmoun

TL;DR
This report outlines the physics goals, detector requirements, and evolving detector concepts for the Electron-Ion Collider, a high-luminosity facility designed to explore nucleon and nuclear structure with unprecedented precision.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive framework for detector design and physics studies tailored to the EIC's unique scientific objectives.
Findings
Identification of key detector requirements for EIC physics
Development of two complementary detector concepts
Analysis of physics measurements guiding detector technology choices
Abstract
This report describes the physics case, the resulting detector requirements, and the evolving detector concepts for the experimental program at the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC). The EIC will be a powerful new high-luminosity facility in the United States with the capability to collide high-energy electron beams with high-energy proton and ion beams, providing access to those regions in the nucleon and nuclei where their structure is dominated by gluons. Moreover, polarized beams in the EIC will give unprecedented access to the spatial and spin structure of the proton, neutron, and light ions. The studies leading to this document were commissioned and organized by the EIC User Group with the objective of advancing the state and detail of the physics program and developing detector concepts that meet the emerging requirements in preparation for the realization of the EIC. The effort aims…
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