Probing Gluon Shadowing in Heavy Nuclei through Bayesian Reweighting of J/$ψ$ Photoproduction in Ultra-Peripheral Collisions (2502.09063v1)
Abstract: The gluon distribution in nuclei plays a pivotal role in understanding quantum chromodynamics (QCD) under extreme nuclear environments, yet remains poorly constrained compared to quark distributions. Coherent \jpsi photoproduction in ultra-peripheral heavy-ion collisions ($\gamma + A \rightarrow \mathrm{J}/\psi + A$) provides a unique solution to this challenge, serving as a sensitive probe of nuclear gluon densities. In this study, we perform Bayesian reweighting on the EPPS21 and nCTEQ15 sets of nuclear parton distribution functions (nPDF) by incorporating coherent \jpsi photoproduction measurements from both RHIC and LHC. The Bayesian-reweighted gluon modification factors $\mathrm{R_g{A}}(x, Q2 = 2.4\ \mathrm{GeV}2)$ reveal pronounced nuclear shadowing in the Pb nuclei, with $\mathrm{R_g{\mathrm{Pb}}} \approx 0.60$ at $x = 10{-4}$, while simultaneously achieving a great reduction of the uncertainties in the density of the gluon across the critical Bjorken-$x$ range $10{-5} < x < 10{-3}$ compared to initial predictions of the nPDF. This work establishes coherent \jpsi photoproduction as a precision tool for gluon nPDF extraction, overcoming traditional deep-inelastic scattering limitations through perturbative QCD-calibrated probes. The constrained nPDFs demonstrate improved consistency with the experimental data across collider energies, particularly in the shadowing-dominated regime.