Solutions to the Balitsky-Kovchegov equation including the dipole orientation
J. Cepila, J. G. Contreras, M. Vaculciak

TL;DR
This paper solves the impact-parameter dependent Balitsky-Kovchegov equation including dipole orientation, demonstrating its applicability to phenomenology and agreement with experimental data for small Bjorken-x physics.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive impact-parameter and dipole orientation dependent solution to the BK equation with new prescriptions for non-locality in rapidity.
Findings
Solutions match HERA data for F2 structure function.
Three prescriptions for rapidity non-locality are explored, with one avoiding Coulomb tails.
The approach is suitable for current and future small-x QCD studies.
Abstract
Solutions of the target-rapidity Balitsky-Kovchegov (BK) equation are studied considering, for the first time, the complete impact-parameter dependence, including the orientation of the dipole with respect to the impact-parameter vector. In our previous work, it has been demonstrated that the spurious Coulomb tails could be tamed using the collinearly-improved kernel and an appropriate initial condition in the projectile-rapidity BK equation. Introducing a different interpretation of the evolution variable, the target-rapidity formulation of the BK equation brings non-locality in rapidity and a kernel modification, removing the term that previously helped to suppress the Coulomb tails. To address this newly emerged non-locality, three different prescriptions are explored here to take into account the rapidities preceding the initial condition. Two of these approaches induce mild Coulomb…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-Energy Particle Collisions Research · Particle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Quantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions
