Measurement of semi-inclusive pi(+) electroproduction off the proton

Semi-inclusive π+ [pi superscript +] electroproduction on protons has been measured with the CLAS detector at Jefferson Lab. The measurement was performed on a liquid-hydrogen target using a 5.75 GeV electron beam. The complete five-fold differential cross sections were measured over a wide kinemati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Skabelin, Alexander V.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: American Physical Society 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/65096
Description
Summary:Semi-inclusive π+ [pi superscript +] electroproduction on protons has been measured with the CLAS detector at Jefferson Lab. The measurement was performed on a liquid-hydrogen target using a 5.75 GeV electron beam. The complete five-fold differential cross sections were measured over a wide kinematic range including the complete range of azimuthal angles between hadronic and leptonic planes, ϕ [phi], enabling us to separate the ϕ-dependent [phi-dependent] terms. Our measurements of the ϕ-independent [phi-independent] term of the cross section at low Bjorken x were found to be in fairly good agreement with pQCD calculations. Indeed, the conventional current fragmentation calculation can account for almost all of the observed cross section, even at small π+ [pi superscript +] momentum. The measured center-of-momentum spectra are in qualitative agreement with high-energy data, which suggests a surprising numerical similarity between the spectator diquark fragmentation in the present reaction and the antiquark fragmentation measured in e+e- [e superscript + e superscript -] collisions. We have observed that the two ϕ-dependent [phi-dependent] terms of the cross section are small. Within our precision the cos⁡2ϕ [cos 2 phi] term is compatible with zero, except for the low-z region, and the measured cos⁡ϕ [cos phi]term is much smaller in magnitude than the sum of the Cahn and Berger effects.