108 research outputs found
Measurement of polarization-transfer to bound protons in carbon and its virtuality dependence
We measured the ratio of the transverse to longitudinal
components of polarization transferred from electrons to bound protons in
by the process at the
Mainz Microtron (MAMI). We observed consistent deviations from unity of this
ratio normalized to the free-proton ratio,
, for both -
and -shell knocked out protons, even though they are embedded in averaged
local densities that differ by about a factor of two. The dependence of the
double ratio on proton virtuality is similar to the one for knocked out protons
from and , suggesting a universal behavior.
It further implies no dependence on average local nuclear density
Measurement of the Target-Normal Single-Spin Asymmetry in Quasielastic Scattering from the Reaction \u3csup\u3e3\u3c/sup\u3eHe\u3csup\u3e↑\u3c/sup\u3e(\u3cem\u3ee\u3c/em\u3e,\u3cem\u3ee\u3c/em\u3e′ )
We report the first measurement of the target single-spin asymmetry, Ay, in quasielastic scattering from the inclusive reaction 3He↑(e,e′ ) on a 3He gas target polarized normal to the lepton scattering plane. Assuming time-reversal invariance, this asymmetry is strictly zero for one-photon exchange. A nonzero Ay can arise from the interference between the one- and two-photon exchange processes which is sensitive to the details of the substructure of the nucleon. An experiment recently completed at Jefferson Lab yielded asymmetries with high statistical precision at Q2=0.13, 0.46, and 0.97 GeV2. These measurements demonstrate, for the first time, that the 3He asymmetry is clearly nonzero and negative at the 4σ–9σ level. Using measured proton-to-3He cross-section ratios and the effective polarization approximation, neutron asymmetries of −(1–3)% were obtained. The neutron asymmetry at high Q2 is related to moments of the generalized parton distributions (GPDs). Our measured neutron asymmetry at Q2=0.97 GeV2 agrees well with a prediction based on two-photon exchange using a GPD model and thus provides a new, independent constraint on these distributions
Search for light massive gauge bosons as an explanation of the anomaly at MAMI
A massive, but light abelian U(1) gauge boson is a well motivated possible
signature of physics beyond the Standard Model of particle physics. In this
paper, the search for the signal of such a U(1) gauge boson in
electron-positron pair-production at the spectrometer setup of the A1
Collaboration at the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) is described. Exclusion limits in
the mass range of 40 MeV up to 300 MeV with a sensitivity in the mixing
parameter of down to are presented. A large
fraction of the parameter space has been excluded where the discrepancy of the
measured anomalous magnetic moment of the muon with theory might be explained
by an additional U(1) gauge boson.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Measurement of the Beam-Recoil Polarization in Low-Energy Virtual Compton Scattering from the Proton
Double-polarization observables in the reaction have been measured at . The experiment
was performed at the spectrometer setup of the A1 Collaboration using the 855
MeV polarized electron beam provided by the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) and a recoil
proton polarimeter. From the double-polarization observables the structure
function is extracted for the first time, with the value , using the low-energy theorem
for Virtual Compton Sattering. This structure function provides a hitherto
unmeasured linear combination of the generalized polarizabilities of the
proton
Observation of Lambda H-4 hyperhydrogen by decay-pion spectroscopy in electron scattering
At the Mainz Microtron MAMI, the first high-resolution pion spectroscopy from
decays of strange systems was performed by electron scattering off a Be-9
target in order to study the ground-state masses of Lambda-hypernuclei.
Positively charged kaons were detected by a short-orbit spectrometer with a
broad momentum acceptance at zero degree forward angles with respect to the
beam, efficiently tagging the production of strangeness in the target nucleus.
In coincidence, negatively charged decay-pions were detected by two independent
high-resolution spectrometers. About 10^3 pionic weak decays of hyperfragments
and hyperons were observed. The pion momentum distribution shows a
monochromatic peak at p_pi ~ 133 MeV/c, corresponding to the unique signature
for the two-body decay of hyperhydrogen Lambda H-4 -> He-4 + pi-, stopped
inside the target. Its binding energy was determined to be B_Lambda = 2.12 +-
0.01 (stat.) +- 0.09 (syst.) MeV with respect to the H-3 + Lambda mass
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