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The term "gravitational form factor" is a term I don't recall ever seeing before the year 2018 (about three decades after I started reading physics papers).

I have read several recent papers about them, most recently, this one, claiming to have experimentally determined a gravitational form factor for a pion, and also this one predicting gravitational form factors for spin-0 hadrons, and this one, touching upon energy momentum form factors. This paper from 2016 (which I looked up today) is a bit more clear, but still leaves me less than 100% sure that I have the concept down.

I had thought I knew what a form factor meant outside of the gravitational context in particle physics (see also this previous answer at Physics.SE), but after reading those papers, I'm not sure I really understood that either. After reading these papers, I'm still fuzzy on just what a gravitational form factor is, or means, or in what kind of application you would use it.

Could someone explain the concept in less technical language than is used in these papers what a "gravitational form factor" is, what it means, and how it would be used?

DanielSank
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ohwilleke
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    I might be incorrect, but usually the form factor is the fourier transform of the spatial distribution. Im the case of gravity, I would assume the form factor would tell you the fourier transform of the gravitational "density" distribution, perhaps the spatial dependence of the stress-energy tensor. – KF Gauss Aug 13 '18 at 20:40
  • @user157879 This helps a little in explaining what it is, but is less helpful in terms of what it means or how you would use it. – ohwilleke Aug 13 '18 at 21:50
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    Fair enough, I have to admit my ignorance about this. The form factor tells you how the object you are studying couples to some field as a function of momentum transfer. Said otherwise it gives you the matrix element for scattering from the corresponding field for arbitrary momentum transfer. – KF Gauss Aug 13 '18 at 22:03
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    So the "charge" form factor would tell you the charge distribution, and thus how the particle will scatter from the corresponding gauge field, which is ordinary electromagnetic radiation/light – KF Gauss Aug 14 '18 at 04:54
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    @ohwilleke You might be interested in this article I ran across today. Here is a link. The article also has a link to other items.https://gizmodo.com/proton-physics-strong-force-quarks-measurement-1851192840 – Sedumjoy Jan 27 '24 at 18:03
  • @Sedumjoy Thanks for the heads up. – ohwilleke Jan 27 '24 at 22:12

1 Answers1

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A qualitative answer by an experimentalist:

This article gives the description in words of why form factors are used:

How BIG ARE the elementary particles? How is their charge distributed? These questions are tackled with form factors, which are measures of the charge and magnetic‐moment distributions in the particles. Scattering of electrons on nucleons, and recent measurements made with electron–positron colliding beams, give form factors for the proton, neutron and pion.

Elementary particle experiments are scattering experiments that try to define the interactions of tiny composite entities obeying quantum mechanical and special relativity algebras. These are studied in the energy momentum space, and the measurements can, using Fourier transforms, give information about space, and thus give a measure of the size of the composite particles.

In this answer about form factors , the format and use of form factors to decide on the size of composite objects is described.

In more mathematical terms, the cross section for this scattering is given by the Rosenbluth formula $$\sigma =\sigma _{0}\left[ W_{2}+2W_{1}\tan ^{2}(\frac{ \theta }{2})\right]$$ where $\sigma_0$ is the classical cross section (Rutherford for spinless particles, Mott for spin-1/2 particles) and $W_1$ and $W_2$ are the form factors. A particle is called point-like if the form factors don't depend on the momentum transfer $Q^2$. Otherwise, the size of the particle is related to the Fourier transform of the form factors.

It seems that this gravitational form factors business is extending the notion by trying to see the effect of gravitational interactions on the form factors, and because of general relativity,this means space distortions are adapted to the form factor tools.

You ask:

what a "gravitational form factor" is, what it means,

In analogy it should give the form of the mass distribution of a complex, quantum mechanical system, as probed by the gravitational interaction.

and how it would be used?

in validating a general relativity model , and giving a new tool for studying hadron components.

The strong force , due to its high couplings cannot be used to probe quarks within the hadron, the way one uses charge distributions to probe the behavior of hadrons within a nucleus. Due to the high complexity of a hadron, see an illustration for a proton here, the electromagnetic form factor is highly complicated. The gravitational interaction gives a tool to measure the form of a hadron in analogy.

anna v
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    Additionally: as EM produces 2 form factors $W_1$ and $W_2$, which can be made into separate electric and magnetic form factors describing the charge and magnetic moment distributions, respectively (from $F_{\mu\nu}$). There are 2 gravitational form factors, $\Theta_1$ & $\Theta_2$, that are the mass/energy density and pressure/stress distributions, respectively (from $T^{\mu\nu}$). Their relation to GDAs is not so straightforward. – JEB Aug 15 '18 at 04:26