Measurement of charged-pion production in deep-inelastic scattering off nuclei with the CLAS detector
S. Moran, R. Dupre, H. Hakobyan, M. Arratia, W. K. Brooks, A. Borquez,, A. El Alaoui, L. El Fassi, K. Hafidi, R. Mendez, T. Mineeva, S. J. Paul, M., J. Amaryan, Giovanni Angelini, Whitney R. Armstrong, H. Atac, N. A. Baltzell,, L. Barion, M. Bashkanov, M. Battaglieri

TL;DR
This study measures charged-pion production in deep-inelastic scattering off various nuclei using CLAS, providing detailed three-dimensional data that tests and constrains theoretical models of parton transport and hadronization within nuclear matter.
Contribution
It presents the first three-dimensional measurements of pion multiplicity ratios in nuclear DIS, offering new data to evaluate models of quark energy loss and hadron formation in nuclei.
Findings
Pion multiplicity ratios depend strongly on fractional energy z.
Ratios decrease with increasing nuclear mass, reaching minimum values for Pb.
Results are consistent with some transport and absorption models but challenge fragmentation function predictions.
Abstract
Background: Energetic quarks in nuclear DIS propagate through the nuclear medium. Processes that are believed to occur inside nuclei include quark energy loss through medium-stimulated gluon bremsstrahlung and intra-nuclear interactions of forming hadrons. More data are required to gain a more complete understanding of these effects. Purpose: To test the theoretical models of parton transport and hadron formation, we compared their predictions for the nuclear and kinematic dependence of pion production in nuclei. Methods: We have measured charged-pion production in semi-inclusive DIS off D, C, Fe, and Pb using the CLAS detector and the CEBAF 5.014 GeV electron beam. We report results on the nuclear-to-deuterium multiplicity ratio for and as a function of energy transfer, four-momentum transfer, and pion energy fraction or transverse momentum - the first…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
