Abstract:
Diffractive Deep Inelastic Scattering – defined by a colorless exchange between the target
nucleus and the incoming electron – is sensitive to the geometric structure of hadrons, and
hence can be used as a probe for exploring the mystery of confinement and saturation. Experimentally, this process manifests itself by a rapidity gap in the detector between the outgoing
nucleus/remnants and the diffractively produced system. The thesis mainly discusses three
complementary event kinematic reconstruction methods for exclusive diffractive events: the
Scattered Electron method, the Jacquet Blondel method, and the Double Angle method;
and we will assess their impact on the physics studied in different kinematic regimes. The
simulation studies are performed using an e-A event generator made exclusively for diffractive events – Sartre. The output of the Sartre generator is passed to both a fast simulation
package (eic-smear) as well as a full Geant4 EIC detector simulation to perform the kinematics reconstruction studies. In addition, for diffractive vector meson production, there is
a known dependence of the angular distribution of the vector meson decay products on the
polarization of the virtual photon. The method by which this effect is incorporated into the
Sartre event generator is also described.