AHEP Advances in High Energy Physics 1687-7365 1687-7357 Hindawi 10.1155/2019/1705263 1705263 Editorial Transverse Momentum Dependent Observables from Low to High Energy: Factorization, Evolution, and Global Analyses https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8822-1323 Pitonyak Daniel 1 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3161-0381 Kang Zhong-Bo 2 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5956-4159 Prokudin Alexei 3 4 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5449-194X Vladimirov Alexey 5 1 Department of Physics Lebanon Valley College Annville PA 17003 USA lvc.edu 2 Department of Physics and Astronomy University of California Los Angeles CA 90095 USA ucla.edu 3 Science Division Penn State University Berks Reading PA 19610 USA 4 Jefferson Lab 12000 Jefferson Avenue Newport News VA 23606 USA 5 Institut für Theoretische Physik Universität Regensburg D-93040 Regensburg Germany uni-regensburg.de 2019 2462019 2019 23 04 2019 23 04 2019 2462019 2019 Copyright © 2019 Daniel Pitonyak et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Transverse momentum dependent (TMD) observables in high-energy particle collisions allow one to study the motion of hadron constituents (partons) in three dimensions. The intense theoretical, phenomenological, and experimental work over the last several decades has seen great progress in modeling and extracting TMD parton distribution functions (PDFs) and fragmentation functions (FFs) [1, 2]. The wealth of experimental data, both current and future [36], across various reactions and energy ranges, along with substantial progress in other approaches, such as Lattice QCD [7], has increased the demand to rigorously study the intrinsic transverse motion of hadrons. Such issues currently being addressed include factorization, evolution, and operator definitions of TMD distributions, as well as how they influence phenomenological and Lattice QCD studies.

Therefore, in this special issue we attempt to further the effort of understanding TMD structure through a series of review articles that address some of the significant areas of ongoing research.

I. Scimemi provided an overview of the tools and concepts which are behind TMD factorization and evolution. He considered both theoretical and phenomenological aspects and the importance of future collider data on further developments.

G. Bozzi and A. Signori focused on the possible flavor dependence of quark intrinsic transverse momentum. They studied the transverse momentum spectrum of electroweak gauge bosons produced in proton-proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider and showed that flavor-dependent TMD effects are comparable in size to other nonperturbative effects.

X. Wang and Z. Lu presented the current understanding of the pion-nucleon Drell-Yan process from the point of view of TMD factorization. They studied the unpolarized cross-section, the Sivers asymmetry, and the double Boer-Mulders effects.

J. Gaunt and T. Kasemets described the status of transverse momentum dependence in double parton scattering (DPS). They emphasized the differences and similarities to TMD single parton scattering as well as the status of the factorization of double color-singlet production in DPS.

H. Xing and S. Yoshida introduced the techniques for next-to-leading order (NLO) calculations of TMD-weighted single-spin asymmetries, which can serve as a useful tool to derive the QCD evolution equations for twist-3 functions and to verify the QCD collinear factorization for twist-3 observables at NLO.

K. Cichy and M. Constantinou gave an extensive, detailed review of Lattice QCD analyses of quasi-PDFs, including theoretical and practical developments and future challenges. They also reviewed numerical results and the theoretical validation of the approach as well as alternative strategies for analyzing PDFs on the lattice.

This special issue gives a nice overview of the various avenues of research currently explored within the community. The papers do well to synthesize and elucidate the state-of-the-art theoretical, phenomenological, and Lattice QCD frameworks of TMD distributions and TMD observables. We hope that the reader will not only gain knowledge from the breadth and depth of this work but also be motivated to engage in their own studies that are required in order to meet the demands of ongoing and future measurements.

Conflicts of Interest

The editors declare that they have no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this special issue.

Daniel Pitonyak Zhong-Bo Kang Alexei Prokudin Alexey Vladimirov

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