Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 January 2010
Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the beautiful theoretical structure believed to control the strong interactions of elementary particles. On the one hand, being a theory of strong interactions it is surprising that one can attack certain problems by perturbative methods, and where this has been done the agreement between theory and experiment is generally impressive. On the other hand a number of non-perturbative problems, which used to seem intractable, are now being attacked by lattice methods, but it is too early to say how significant the results are vis-à-vis experiment.
Because the theory deals with partons (quarks and gluons), whereas experiments are performed with hadrons, there is always some uncalculable piece in any theoretical treatment of a reaction. Consequently there is, to date, no single crucial experiment, which, analogous to the Lamb shift in QED, could be said to prove or disprove the validity of QCD. It is thus important to test the theory in as many ways as possible.
Historically, spin-dependent experiments have played a seminal rôle in verifying or falsifying theories. QCD has a very simple and clear-cut spin structure, so that the study of spin-dependent reactions should provide an excellent way to probe and test the theory further. In fact, as we shall see in Section 14.3 there is apparently serious disagreement between theory and experiment in several reactions, but it is now believed that this is a result of the naivety of the calculations.
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