29,011 research outputs found

    A test of local Lorentz invariance with Compton scattering asymmetry

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    We report on a measurement of the constancy and anisotropy of the speed of light relative to the electrons in photon-electron scattering. We used the Compton scattering asymmetry measured by the new Compton polarimeter in Hall~C at Jefferson Lab to test for deviations from unity of the vacuum refractive index (nn). For photon energies in the range of 9 - 46 MeV, we obtain a new limit of 1n<1.4×1081-n < 1.4 \times 10^{-8}. In addition, the absence of sidereal variation over the six month period of the measurement constrains any anisotropies in the speed of light. These constitute the first study of Lorentz invariance using Compton asymmetry. Within the minimal standard model extension framework, our result yield limits on the photon and electron coefficients κ~0+YZ,cTX,κ~0+ZX\tilde{\kappa}_{0^+}^{YZ}, c_{TX}, \tilde{\kappa}_{0^+}^{ZX}, and cTYc_{TY}. Although, these limits are several orders of magnitude larger than the current best limits, they demonstrate the feasibility of using Compton asymmetry for tests of Lorentz invariance. Future parity violating electron scattering experiments at Jefferson Lab will use higher energy electrons enabling better constraints.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    Color Transparency: past, present and future

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    We review a unique prediction of Quantum Chromo Dynamics, called color transparency (CT), where the final (and/or initial) state interactions of hadrons with the nuclear medium must vanish for exclusive processes at high momentum transfers. We retrace the progress of our understanding of this phenomenon, which began with the discovery of the J/ψJ/\psi meson, followed by the discovery of high energy CT phenomena, the recent developments in the investigations of the onset of CT at intermediate energies and the directions for future studies.Comment: 41 pages, 27 figures, to appear in Prog. Nucl. Part. Phy

    Pion-induced Drell-Yan processes and the flavor-dependent EMC effect

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    Pion-induced Drell-Yan processes are proposed as a potential tool to measure the flavor dependence of the EMC effect, that is, the flavor-dependent modification of quark distributions in the nuclear medium. Existing pionic Drell-Yan data are compared with calculations using a recent model for nuclear quark distributions that incorporates flavor-dependent nuclear effects. While no firm conclusions can yet be drawn, we demonstrate that existing Drell-Yan data seem to imply a flavor dependence of the EMC effect. We highlight how pion-induced Drell-Yan experiments on nuclear targets can access important new aspects of the EMC effect, not probed in deep inelastic scattering, and will therefore provide very stringent constrains for models of nuclear quark distributions. Predictions for possible future pion-induced Drell-Yan experiments are also presented.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Resonance State Wave Functions of 15^{15}Be using Supersymmetric Quantum Mechanics

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    The theoretical procedure of supersymmetric quantum mechanics is adopted to generate the resonance state wave functions of the unbound nucleus 15^{15}Be. In this framework, we used a density dependent M3Y microscopic potential and arrived at the energy and width of the 1.8 MeV (5/2+^+) resonance state. We did not find any other nearby resonances for 15^{15}Be. It becomes apparent that the present framework is a powerful tool to theoretically complement the increasingly important accelerator based experiments with unbound nuclei.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Phys. Lett. B (2017

    The Generalized Counting Rule and Oscillatory Scaling

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    We have studied the energy dependence of the pppp elastic scattering data and the pion-photoproduction data at 90^\circ c.m. angle in light of the new generalized counting rule derived for exclusive processes. We show that by including the helicity flipping amplitudes (with energy dependence given by the generalized counting rule) and their interference with the Landshoff amplitude, we are able to reproduce the energy dependence of all cross-section and spin-correlation (ANN_{NN}) data available above the resonance region. The pion-photoproduction data can also be described by this approach, but in this case data with much finer energy spacing is needed to confirm the oscillations about the scaling behavior.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figs, submitted to PRC rapid com
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