503 research outputs found

    Short-Distance Structure of Nuclei

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    One of Jefferson Lab's original missions was to further our understanding of the short-distance structure of nuclei. In particular, to understand what happens when two or more nucleons within a nucleus have strongly overlapping wave-functions; a phenomena commonly referred to as short-range correlations. Herein, we review the results of the (e,e'), (e,e'p) and (e,e'pN) reactions that have been used at Jefferson Lab to probe this short-distance structure as well as provide an outlook for future experiments.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, for publication in Journal of Physics

    Precise determination of proton magnetic radius from electron scattering data

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    We extract the proton magnetic radius from the high-precision electron-proton elastic scattering cross section data. Our theoretical framework combines dispersion analysis and chiral effective field theory and implements the dynamics governing the shape of the low-Q2Q^2 form factors. It allows us to use data up to Q2∼Q^2\sim 0.5 GeV2^2 for constraining the radii and overcomes the difficulties of empirical fits and Q2→0Q^2 \rightarrow 0 extrapolation. We obtain a magnetic radius rMpr_M^p = 0.850 ±\pm0.001 (fit 68%) ±\pm0.010 (theory full range) fm, significantly different from earlier results obtained from the same data, and close to the extracted electric radius rEpr_E^p = 0.842 ±\pm0.002 (fit) ±\pm0.010 (theory) fm.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Electron Spin Precession at CEBAF

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    The nuclear physics experiments at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility often require longitudinally polarized electrons to be simultaneously delivered to three experimental halls. The degree of longitudinal polarization to each hall varies as function of the accelerator settings, making it challenging in certain situations to deliver a high degree of longitudinal polarization to all the halls simultaneously. Normally, the degree of longitudinal polarization the halls receive is optimized by changing the initial spin direction at the beginning of the machine with a Wien filter. Herein, it is shown that it is possible to further improve the degree of longitudinal polarization for multiple experimental halls by redistributing the energy gain of the CEBAF linacs while keeping the total energy gain fixed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the 18th International Symposium on Spin Physics (SPIN2008

    Neutron spin structure with polarized deuterons and spectator proton tagging at EIC

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    The neutron's deep-inelastic structure functions provide essential information for the flavor separation of the nucleon parton densities, the nucleon spin decomposition, and precision studies of QCD phenomena in the flavor-singlet and nonsinglet sectors. Traditional inclusive measurements on nuclear targets are limited by dilution from scattering on protons, Fermi motion and binding effects, final-state interactions, and nuclear shadowing at x << 0.1. An Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) would enable next-generation measurements of neutron structure with polarized deuteron beams and detection of forward-moving spectator protons over a wide range of recoil momenta (0 < p_R < several 100 MeV in the nucleus rest frame). The free neutron structure functions could be obtained by extrapolating the measured recoil momentum distributions to the on-shell point. The method eliminates nuclear modifications and can be applied to polarized scattering, as well as to semi-inclusive and exclusive final states. We review the prospects for neutron structure measurements with spectator tagging at EIC, the status of R&D efforts, and the accelerator and detector requirements.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. To appear in proceedings of Tensor Polarized Solid Target Workshop, Jefferson Lab, March 10-12, 201
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