Origin of the nucleon gravitational form factor BN(t): Exposition in light-front holographic QCD

Abstract

Recent lattice QCD simulations and phenomenological models indicate that the nucleon's gravitational form factor BN(t) remains remarkably small at finite momentum transfer t. While BN(0) = 0 is a known consequence of the equivalence principle, the physical origin of its suppression at finite t has not been fully elucidated. In this work, we demonstrate that the smallness of BN(t) arises from a fundamental cancellation within the nucleon's wave functions. Using light-front holographic QCD, we show that BN(t) is governed by an antisymmetric factor in the longitudinal dynamics that leads to the exact vanishing of the form factor in the symmetric limit and significant suppression for realistic nucleon structures. Our results suggest that the smallness of BN(t) is a signature of the nucleon's dominant S-wave character, providing a formal justification for its frequent omission in practical applications like near-threshold J/ production.

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