Measurements of the Separated Longitudinal Structure Function FL from Hydrogen and Deuterium Targets at Low Q2
Abstract
Structure functions, as measured in lepton-nucleon scattering, have proven to be very useful in studying the quark dynamics within the nucleon. However, it is experimentally difficult to separately determine the longitudinal and transverse structure functions, and consequently there are substantially less data available for the longitudinal structure function in particular. Here we present separated structure functions for hydrogen and deuterium at low four--momentum transfer squared, Q2< 1 GeV2, and compare these with parton distribution parameterizations and a kT factorization approach. While differences are found, the parameterizations generally agree with the data even at the very low Q2 scale of the data. The deuterium data show a smaller longitudinal structure function, and smaller ratio of longitudinal to transverse cross section R, than the proton. This suggests either an unexpected difference in R for the proton and neutron or a suppression of the gluonic distribution in nuclei.
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