Numerical solution of Q² evolution equations in a brute-force method
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We investigate numerical solution of $Q^2$ evolution equations for structure functions in the nucleon and in nuclei. (Dokshitzer-Gribov-Lipatov-)Altarelli-Parisi and Mueller-Qiu evolution equations are solved in a brute-force method. Spin-independent flavor-nonsinglet and singlet equations with next-to-leading-order $\alpha_s$ corrections are studied. Dividing the variables $x$ and $Q^2$ into small steps, we simply solve the integrodifferential equations. Numerical results indicate that accuracy is better than 2\% in the region $10^{-4}<x<0.8$ if more than two-hundred $Q^2$ steps and more than one-thousand $x$ steps are taken. The numerical solution is discussed in detail, and evolution results are compared with $Q^2$ dependent data in CDHSW, SLAC, BCDMS, EMC, NMC, Fermilab-E665, ZEUS, and H1 experiments. We provide a FORTRAN program for Q$^2$ evolution (and ``devolution'') of nonsinglet-quark, singlet-quark, $q_i+\bar q_i$, and gluon distributions (and corresponding structure functions) in the nucleon and in nuclei. This is a very useful program for studying spin-independent structure functions.
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