J. A. Crittenden
Physikalisches
Institut, Universität Bonn
Nußallee 12, 53115 Bonn, Germany
The first five years of operation of the multi-purpose experiments
ZEUS and H1 at the electron-proton collider HERA have
opened a new era in the study of diffractive processes in photon-proton interactions.
Of particular interest are the investigations of exclusive vector-meson
production, , which present an
opportunity for testing the recently proposed applications of perturbative quantum
chromodynamical (pQCD) calculations to diffractive processes.
The high flux of quasi-real photons from the electron beam
has allowed high-statistics studies of vector-meson photoproduction to be
compared to the deeply inelastic processes at high photon virtuality
.
The extension of the accessible
c.m. energy range by more than an
order of magnitude over previous measurements is of particular importance for studies
of diffractive processes, due to the enhanced sensitivity to their characteristically
weak energy dependence.
Measurements of the energy dependence and the slope of the forward diffractive peak of the
elastic cross sections for
, and
production
have provided tests of the proposal that the mass (or size) of the vector meson
furnishes an additional scale which can be used to study the transition to the perturbative
domain. These issues of scale will be discussed in the context of
topical phenomenological models, comparing the HERA results and those from
fixed-target experiments at lower energy to the wealth of calculations
available in the contemporary literature.