Probing small Bjorken-x nuclear gluonic structure via coherent J/ photoproduction in ultraperipheral PbPb collisions at sNN = 5.02 TeV
Abstract
Quasireal photons exchanged in relativistic heavy ion interactions are powerful probes of the gluonic structure of nuclei. The coherent J/ photoproduction cross section in ultraperipheral lead-lead collisions is measured as a function of photon-nucleus center-of-mass energies per nucleon (WPbγN), over a wide range of 40 WPbγN 400 GeV. Results are obtained using data at the nucleon-nucleon center-of-mass energy of 5.02 TeV collected by the CMS experiment at the CERN LHC, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 1.52 nb-1. The cross section is observed to rise rapidly at low WPbγN, and plateau above WPbγN ≈ 40 GeV, up to 400 GeV, a new regime of small Bjorken-x (≈ 6 × 10-5) gluons being probed in a heavy nucleus. The observed energy dependence is not predicted by current quantum chromodynamic models.
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