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Spin and Orbital Angular Momentum of Quarks and Gluons in the Nucleon ECT* Colloquium: Introduction to quark and gluon angular momentum Cédric Lorcé IFPA Liège August 25, 2014, ECT*, Trento, Italy Outline What is it all about ? • Why is there a controversy ? • How can we measure AM ? • Outline What is it all about ? • Why is there a controversy ? • How can we measure AM ? • Structure of matter Atom Nucleus Nucleons Quarks u Up Proton d Down Neutron 10-10m Atomic physics 10-14m Nuclear physics 10-15m Hadronic physics 10-18m Particle physics Structure of nucleons Our picture/understanding of the nucleon evolves ! But many questions remain unanswered … • Where does the proton spin come from ? • How are quarks and gluons distributed inside the nucleon ? • What is the proton size ? • Why are quarks and gluons confined ? • How are constituent quarks related to QCD ? •… Angular momentum decomposition Quark spin ? ? Lq Lg Sq Dark spin ~ 30 % ? Lq ? Sq Lg Sg Lq Sg Sq Jg Many questions/issues : • Frame dependence ? • Gauge invariance ? • Uniqueness ? • Measurability ? •… Review: [Leader, C.L. (2014)] Outline What is it all about ? • Why is there a controversy ? • How can we measure AM ? • In short … Noether’s theorem : Continuous symmetry Conserved quantity Translation invariance Rotation invariance Total (linear) momentum Total angular momentum We all agree on the total quantities BUT … We disagree on their decomposition In short … 3 viewpoints : • Meaningless, unphysical discussions No unique definition ill-defined problem • There is a unique «physical» decomposition Missing fundamental principle in standard approach • Matter of convention and convenience Measured quantities are unique BUT physical interpretation is not unique In short … 3 viewpoints : • Meaningless, unphysical discussions No unique definition ill-defined problem • There is a unique «physical» decomposition Missing fundamental principle in standard approach • Matter of convention and convenience Measured quantities are unique BUT physical interpretation is not unique Back to basics AM decomposition is a complicated story Let’s have a glimpse … Back to basics Classical mechanics Free pointlike particle Total AM is conserved but not unique ! Back to basics Classical mechanics Free composite particle CM motion can be separated Back to basics Classical mechanics Internal AM Option 1 : Boost invariance Uniqueness Option 2 : Boost invariance Uniqueness Conventional choice : Option 2 with The quantity is boost-invariant BUT its physical interpretation is simple only in the CM frame ! Back to basics Classical mechanics Boost-invariant extension (BIE) Frame-dependent quantity (e.g. Frame ) Back to basics Classical mechanics Boost-invariant extension (BIE) Frame-dependent quantity (e.g. BIE1 CM «Natural» frames (e.g. Frame ) ) Back to basics Classical mechanics Boost-invariant extension (BIE) Frame-dependent quantity (e.g. ) BIE2 BIE1 CM «Natural» frames (e.g. Frame ) Back to basics Classical electrodynamics Charged pointlike particle in external magnetic field AM conservation ??? Back to basics Classical electrodynamics Charged pointlike particle in external magnetic field «Hidden» kinetic AM Conserved canonical AM Kinetic and canonical AM are different System = matter + radiation Ambiguous ! Back to basics Quantum mechanics Pointlike particle at rest has intrinsic AM (spin) AM is quantized All components cannot be simultaneously measured In general, only is conserved Back to basics Quantum mechanics Expectation values are in general not quantized Composite particle at rest Quantum average Back to basics Special relativity Lorentz boosts do not commute Rest frame «Standard» boost Moving frame Spin uniquely defined in the rest frame only ! Back to basics Special relativity Relativistic mass is frame-dependent Lorentz contraction Relativity of simultaneity No (complete) separation of CM coordinates from internal coordinates ! Back to basics Special relativity Lorentz-invariant extension (LIE) Frame-dependent quantity (e.g. ) LIE2 LIE1 Rest «Natural» frames (e.g. Frame ) Back to basics Gauge theory Gauge non-invariant […] in QCD we should make clear what a quark or gluon parton is in an interacting theory. The subtlety here is in the issue of gauge invariance: a pure quark field in one gauge is a superposition of quarks and gluons in another. Different ways of gluon field gauge fixing predetermine different decompositions of the coupled quark-gluon fields into quark and gluon degrees of freedom. [Bashinsky, Jaffe (1998)] Gauge invariant A choice of gauge is a choice of basis Back to basics Gauge theory Analogy with integration «Gauge» 1 «Gauge» 2 Riemann Lebesgue Which one is «physical» ? Some would say : None! Only the total area under the curve makes sense Others would say: Both! Choosing one or another is a matter of convenience Back to basics Gauge theory 3 strategies : 1) 2) 3) Consider only simple (local) gauge-invariant quantities Relate these quantities to observables Try to find an interpretation (optional) 1) 2) 3) Fix the gauge Consider quantities with simple interpretation Try to find the corresponding observables 1) 2) 3) Define new complicated (non-local) gauge-invariant quantities Consider quantities with simple interpretation Try to find the corresponding observables Back to basics Gauge theory Gauge-invariant extension (GIE) Gauge non-invariant quantity (e.g. ) GIE2 GIE1 Coulomb «Natural» gauges (e.g. Gauge ) [Dirac (1955)] Back to basics Gauge theory Infinitely many GIEs Uniqueness issue […] one can generalize a gauge variant nonlocal operator […] to more than one gauge invariant expressions, raising the problem of deciding which is the “true” one. [Bashinsky, Jaffe (1998)] Some GIEs are nevertheless measurable In other words, the gauge-invariant extension of the gluon spin in light-cone gauge can be measured. Note that one can easily find gauge-invariant extensions of the gluon spin in other gauges. But we may not always find an experimental observable which reduces to the gluon spin in these gauges. [Hoodbhoy, Ji (1999)] Back to basics Additional issues • Time dependence and interaction • Forms of dynamics • Scale and scheme dependence • Should Lorentz invariance be manifest ? • Quantum gauge transformation • Surface terms • Evolution equation • How are different GIEs related ? • Should the energy-momentum tensor be symmetric ? • Topological effects ? • Longitudinal vs transverse •… As promised, it is pretty complicated … Spin decompositions in a nutshell uark uark luon luon Decomposition? Canonical Kinetic Spin decompositions in a nutshell Canonical Lq Lg Kinetic Sq Sg Gauge non-invariant ! [Jaffe, Manohar (1990)] Lq Sq Jg « Incomplete » [Ji (1997)] Spin decompositions in a nutshell Canonical Lq Lg Kinetic Sq Sg Lq Lg Sq Sg Gauge-invariant extension (GIE) [Chen et al. (2008)] [Wakamatsu (2010)] Spin decompositions in a nutshell Canonical Lq Lg Kinetic Sq Sg Lq Lg Sq Sg Gauge-invariant extension (GIE) [Chen et al. (2008)] [Wakamatsu (2010)] Stueckelberg symmetry [Stoilov (2010)] [C.L. (2013)] Ambiguous ! Infinitely many possibilities ! Coulomb GIE Lq Lq Sq Lg Sg Lg Sq [Chen et al. (2008)] Lpot Sg [Wakamatsu (2010)] Light-front GIE Lq Sq Lq Lg Sg [Hatta (2011)] [C.L. (2013)] Lg Sq Sg Lpot Outline What is it all about ? • Why is there a controversy ? • How can we measure AM ? • Parton correlators General non-local quark correlator Parton correlators Gauge invariant but path dependent Gauge transformation Partonic interpretation Phase-space «density» Transverse momentum Longitudinal momentum Transverse position 2+3D [Ji (2003)] [Belitsky, Ji, Yuan (2004)] [C.L., Pasquini (2011)] Example : canonical OAM Spatial distribution of average transverse momentum « Vorticity » [C.L., Pasquini (2011)] [C.L., Pasquini, Xiong, Yuan (2012)] [Hatta (2012)] Theoretical tools Parton distribution zoo Phase-space (Wigner) distribution GTMDs 2+3D [C.L., Pasquini, Vanderhaeghen (2011)] Theoretical tools Parton distribution zoo Phase-space (Wigner) distribution GTMDs 2+3D TMDs 2+1D «Physical» objects 0+3D GPDs [C.L., Pasquini, Vanderhaeghen (2011)] Theoretical tools Parton distribution zoo Phase-space (Wigner) distribution GTMDs 2+3D GPDs TMDs 2+1D «Physical» objects 0+3D PDFs FFs 2+0D 0+1D Charges [C.L., Pasquini, Vanderhaeghen (2011)] Theoretical tools Parton distribution zoo GTMDs GPDs «Physical» objects TMDs PDFs FFs Charges [C.L., Pasquini, Vanderhaeghen (2011)] Asymmetries Angular modulations of the cross section are sensitive to AM Example : SIDIS [Mulders, Tangermann (1996)] [Boer, Mulders (1998)] [Bacchetta et al. (2004)] [Bacchetta et al. (2007)] [Anselmino et al. (2011)] Kinetic vs canonical OAM Kinetic OAM (Ji) Pure twist-3 Quark naive canonical OAM (Jaffe-Manohar) [C.L., Pasquini (2012)] Model-dependent ! Canonical OAM (Jaffe-Manohar) [C.L., Pasquini (2011)] [C.L., Pasquini, Xiong, Yuan (2012)] [Kanazawa, C.L., Metz, Pasquini, Schlegel (2014)] No gluons and not QCD EOM ! but Lattice results CI DI [Deka et al. (2013)] Summary • We all agree on total angular momentum • We disagree on its decomposition (matter of convention ?) • Observables are gauge invariant but physical interpretation need not • Scattering on nucleon is sensitive to AM Summary Nucleon LFWFs DPDs GPDs TMDs FFs PDFs Backup slides Back to basics Special relativity Different foliations of space-time Light-front components «Space» = 3D hypersurface «Time» = hypersurface label Instant-form dynamics Light-front form dynamics Time Space Energy Momentum [Dirac (1949)] Back to basics Quantum optics Photons have only 2 polarization (helicity) states Twisted light carry OAM Back to basics Special relativity We measure frame-dependent quantities Then combine them in a frame-independent way And finally interpret in a special frame v The proper length of a pencil is clearly frame independent. When we say the length of a house in the frame v = 0.9999c is the same as the proper length of the pencil, we are not saying that the length of the house is frame-independent. Rather, we are saying that the length of the house in a special frame can be known from measuring a frame-independent quantity. [Hoodbhoy, Ji (1999)] Chen et al. approach [Chen et al. (2008,2009)] [Wakamatsu (2010,2011)] Gauge transformation (assumed) Pure-gauge covariant derivatives Field strength Stueckelberg symmetry Geometrical interpretation Fixed reference point Explicit expressions Non-local ! [Hatta (2012)] [C.L. (2013)] Stueckelberg symmetry Decomposition is path-dependent ! Non-local ! Path dependence Stueckelberg non-invariance ? [Hatta (2012)] [C.L. (2013)] Stueckelberg symmetry Non-local color phase factor Path-dependent Path-independent Path dependence Stueckelberg non-invariance [C.L. (2013)] OAM and path dependence [Ji, Xiong, Yuan (2012)] [Hatta (2012)] [C.L. (2013)] Quark generalized OAM operator x-based Fock-Schwinger Light-front Lq Lq ISI Drell-Yan FSI SIDIS Coincides locally with kinetic quark OAM Naive T-even Stueckelberg symmetry Degrees of freedom Classical Non-dynamical Quantum Dynamical plays the role of a background field ! Active Passive [C.L. (2014)] Stueckelberg symmetry Quantum Electrodynamics « Physical » « Background » Phase in internal space Stueckelberg Passive Active Active x (Passive)-1 Light-front wave functions (LFWFs) Fock expansion of the nucleon state Probability associated with the Fock states Momentum and angular momentum conservation gauge Light-front wave functions (LFWFs) Overlap representation GTMDs ~ Momentum Polarization [C.L., Pasquini, Vanderhaeghen (2011)] Light-front wave functions (LFWFs) Light-front quark models SU(6) spin-flavor wave function Wigner rotation Light-front helicity Canonical spin [C.L., Pasquini, Vanderhaeghen (2011)] Parametrization Twist-2 GTMDs Nucleon polarization Quark polarization TMDs GPDs Complete parametrizations : Quarks [Meissner, Metz, Schlegel (2009)] [C.L., Pasquini (2013)] Quarks & gluons Energy-momentum tensor A lot of interesting physics is contained in the EM tensor Energy density Momentum density [Polyakov, Shuvaev (2002)] [Polyakov (2003)] [Goeke et al. (2007)] [Cebulla et al. (2007)] Shear stress Normal stress (pressure) Energy flux In rest frame Momentum flux Energy-momentum tensor In presence of spin density Belinfante « improvement » Spin density gradient Four-momentum circulation In rest frame No « spin » contribution ! Energy-momentum tensor QCD Energy-momentum operator Matrix elements Normalization Energy-momentum tensor Energy-momentum FFs Momentum sum rule Angular momentum sum rule Vanishing gravitomagnetic moment ! [Ji (1997)] Energy-momentum tensor Energy-momentum FFs Non-conserved current Momentum sum rule Angular momentum sum rule Vanishing gravitomagnetic moment ! [Ji (1997)] Energy-momentum tensor Leading-twist component of Link with GPDs Accessible e.g. in DVCS ! [Ji (1997)]