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Nuclear Physics and Electron Scattering

Nuclear Physics and Electron Scattering. “Nuclear” Physics = Strong Force. Four forces in nature Gravity Electromagnetic Weak Strong  Responsible for binding protons and neutrons together to make nuclei, holds together quarks that make protons and neutrons

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Nuclear Physics and Electron Scattering

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  1. Nuclear Physics and Electron Scattering

  2. “Nuclear” Physics = Strong Force • Four forces in nature • Gravity • Electromagnetic • Weak • Strong  Responsible for binding protons and neutrons together to make nuclei, holds together quarks that make protons and neutrons • Why study the strong force? • The nucleus makes up 99.9% of the mass of the atoms around you • Nuclear reactions crucial to understanding how the universe was formed • Because it’s hard! The underlying theory is simple, but it’s difficult to understand how we get from that theory to real protons, neutrons, nuclei

  3. Scope of Nuclear Physics • Topics that fall under the umbrella of the label “nuclear physics” depends to some degree on where you are • In the United States, includes • Nuclear structure (how protons and neutrons combine to make atomic nucleus)

  4. Scope of Nuclear Physics • Nuclear structure (how protons and neutrons combine to make atomic nucleus) Exploration of “stable” nuclei – study highly excited states to understand nuclear structure http://fribusers.org/2_INFO/2_crucial.html

  5. Scope of Nuclear Physics • Nuclear structure (how protons and neutrons combine to make atomic nucleus) Exploration of “stable” nuclei – study highly excited states to understand nuclear structure  Expand the study to highly unstable nuclei to understand the limits of nuclear matter http://fribusers.org/2_INFO/2_crucial.html

  6. Scope of Nuclear Physics • Topics that fall under the umbrella of the label “nuclear physics” depends to some degree on where you are • In the United States, includes: • Nuclear structure (how protons and neutrons combine to make atomic nucleus) • Relativistic heavy ions – smashing together heavy nuclei at high energies to explore new states of strongly interacting matter

  7. Scope of Nuclear Physics • Relativistic heavy ions – smashing together heavy nuclei at high energies to explore new states of strongly interacting matter Ions about to collide Ion collision Quarks gluons freed Plasma created at the beginning of the universe there were no protons and neutrons, only free quarks and gluons http://www.bnl.gov/rhic/physics.asp

  8. Scope of Nuclear Physics • Topics that fall under the umbrella of the label “nuclear physics” depends to some degree on where you are • In the United States, includes: • Nuclear structure (how protons and neutrons combine to make atomic nucleus) • Relativistic heavy ions – smashing together heavy nuclei at high energies to explore new states of strongly interacting matter • Quantum Chromodynamics how quarks and gluons interact to form protons and neutrons and eventually nuclei • Symmetry tests  searches for physics beyond the Standard Model

  9. Electron Scattering and Nuclear Physics • Electron scattering is a powerful tool for studying the physics of nuclei and nucleons • The electromagnetic interaction is very well described by Quantum electrodynamics (QED) – the probe is understood • The electromagnetic coupling is weak (a=1/137) - electrons probe the whole volume without bias e- Electron scattering can be used to study Nuclear structure Nuclei at large (local) density Quantum chromodynamics e- Jefferson Lab was constructed to be a state of the art, electron scattering facility

  10. Jefferson Lab Jefferson Lab is the site of an electron scattering facility in Newport News, Virginia (USA) Accelerator 2 cold superconducting linacs Eeup to 6 GeV Continuous polarized electron beam (P=85%) 3 Experimental Halls with complementary capabilities

  11. Experimental Hall A 2 High Resolution Spectrometers  Good for clean ID of hard to see final states

  12. Experimental Hall B CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) • Detects particles emitted in all directions simultaneously • Good for measurements of reactions with complicated final states

  13. Experimental Hall C Short Orbit Spectrometer High Momentum Spectrometer High accuracy measurements of absolute probabilities for processes

  14. A Generic Electron Scattering Experiment Detector Electron beam Target

  15. A Generic Electron Scattering Experiment Detector Electron beam Target

  16. What we measure • In the “simplest” experiments, we measure the probability for an electron to scatter in a particular direction with a specific momentum • In more complicated experiments, we measure the above, in combination with the probability to produce another particle • The relative (and absolute) probabilities for different processes can tell us about the structure of the nucleus (or proton/neutron) we are probing • The common analogy is that it’s like trying to learn how a watch is made by throwing it against the wall and looking at the pieces!

  17. Tools of the Trade: Magnetic Spectrometers Magnets focus and bend charged particles into our detectors Dipole: acts like a prism, separates particles with different momenta Quadrupoles: act like lenses, focusing particles

  18. Tools of the Trade: Detectors • Detectors after spectrometer magnets: • Track charged particles to determine momentum and direction • Determine particle species • Measure time of arrival of particle in spectrometer

  19. Jefferson Lab’s Original Mission Statement • Key Mission and Principal Focus (1987): • The study of the largely unexplored transition between the nucleon-meson and the quark-gluon descriptions of nuclear matter. The Role of Quarks in Nuclear Physics • We can describe nuclei, for the most part just using protons, neutrons, and other exchange particles: does there come a point at which we must describe in terms of quarks and gluons? • If not, why not?

  20. Related Topics • Do individual nucleons change their size, shape, and quark structure in the nuclear medium? • How do quarks and gluons come together to determine the structure of the proton? • What is the distribution of charge and magnetism in the nucleon? • How is the spin of the proton built up from quarks and gluons? • What are the properties of the strong force (“QCD”) in the regime where quarks are confined?

  21. Electron Scattering Basics Cross section: Detector with solid angle DW Target Electron beam

  22. Electron Scattering Basics Cross section: Detector with solid angle DW Luminosity Target Electron beam

  23. Electron Scattering kinematics Scattered electron Incident Electron beam Qe g* Fixed target with mass M N Virtual photon kinematics me = 0

  24. Coulomb Scattering Cross section for electron scattering from a fixed Coulomb potential Qe g* Z Mott Cross Section

  25. Electron Muon Scattering Cross section for electron scattering from a spin ½ particle with no structure Qe g* Muon

  26. Electron Nucleon Scattering Cross section for electron scattering from a spin ½ particle with some (quark) structure Qe F1 and F2 describe the internal structure of the nucleon - commonly written, g* Nucleon Distribution of charge and magnetization in the nucleon

  27. (inelastic) Electron Nucleon Scattering Cross section for electron scattering from a spin ½ particle  target does not remain intact, an inelastic reaction Qe W1, W2 are the inelastic structure functions At very large Q2, they become a function of one dimensionless variable x=Q2/2Mn g* F1, F2related to quark distributions in nucleon/nucleus

  28. Kinematics p e' scattering plane pq reaction plane (,q) e pA–1 x “out-of-plane” angle Four-momentum transfer: Q2 –qq= q2 –2 = 4ee' sin2/2 Missing momentum:pm = q–p = pA–1= –p0 Missing energy: m= –Tp– TA–1 PWIA

  29. Electron Scattering at Fixed Q2 Elastic Deep Inelastic  Quasielastic N* Nucleus  Elastic Deep Inelastic  N* Proton 

  30. A–1 e' p q p0 p0 e A Simple Theory Of Nucleon Knock-out Plane Wave Impulse Approximation (PWIA) spectator A-1 q – p = pA-1= pm= – p0

  31. Spectral Function In nonrelativistic PWIA: e-p cross section nuclear spectral function For bound state of recoil system: proton momentum distribution

  32. Reaction Mechanisms Example: Final State Interactions (FSI) p A–1 FSI e' p0' q e p0 A

  33. Improve Theory Distorted Wave Impulse Approximation (DWIA) “Distorted” spectral function

  34. 12C(e,e'p)11B 1p knockout from 12C DWIA calculations give correct shapes, but: Missing strength observed. (pm) [(MeV/c)3] NIKHEF pm [MeV/c] G. van der Steenhoven, et al., Nucl. Phys. A480, 547 (1988).

  35. Results from (e,e’p) Measurements Independent-Particle Shell-Model is based upon the assumption that each nucleon moves independently in an average potential (mean field) induced by the surrounding nucleons SPECTROSCOPIC STRENGTH The (e,e'p) data for knockout of valence and deeply bound orbits in nuclei gives spectroscopic factors that are 60 – 70% of the mean field prediction. Target Mass

  36. Short-Range Correlations 2N-SRC  5o 1.7fermi o = 0.17 GeV/fermi3 Nucleons

  37. Questions Benhar et al., Phys. Lett. B 177 (1986) 135. • What fraction of the momentum distribution is due to 2N-SRC? • What is the relative momentum between the nucleons in the pair? • What is the ratio of pp to pn pairs? • Are these nucleons different from free nucleons (e.g. size)?

  38. Questions Benhar et al., Phys. Lett. B 177 (1986) 135. • What fraction of the momentum distribution is due to 2N-SRC? • What is the relative momentum between the nucleons in the pair? • What is the ratio of pp to pn pairs? • Are these nucleons different from free nucleons (e.g. size)?

  39. Questions Benhar et al., Phys. Lett. B 177 (1986) 135. • What fraction of the momentum distribution is due to 2N-SRC? • What is the relative momentum between the nucleons in the pair? • What is the ratio of pp to pn pairs? • Are these nucleons different from free nucleons (e.g. size)? BUT Other Effects Such As A Final State Rescattering Can Mask The Signal…

  40. Typical energy scale of nuclear process ~ MeV Typical energy scale of DIS ~ GeV Compared to energy scale of the probe, binding energies are less for nuclear targets. So naïve assumption (at least in the intermediate xbj region) ; Nuclear quark distributions = sum of proton + neutron quark distributions The EMC effect 40

  41. It turns out that the above assumption is not true! Nuclear dependence of structurefunctions, (F2A/F2D), discovered over 25 years ago; “EMC Effect” Quarks in nuclei behave differently than the quarks in free nucleon The EMC effect Aubert et al., Phys. Lett. B123, 275 (1983) EMC effect fundamentally challenged our understanding of nuclei and remains as an active area of interest. ( SPIRES shows 887 citations for the above publication) 41

  42. The EMC effect: models • Interpretation of the EMC effect requires better understanding of traditional nuclear effects (better handle at high x). • Fermi motion and binding often considered uninteresting part of EMC effect, but must be properly included in any examination of “exotic” effects. • Data are limited at large x, where one can evaluate binding models, limited at low-A, where nuclear structure uncertainties are small. Main goals of new Jefferson Lab experiments • First measurement of EMC effect on 3He for x > 0.4 • Increase in the precision of 4He ratios. • Precision data at large x for heavy nuclei.

  43. EMC effect is simply the fact the ratio of DIS cross sections is not one J.J. Aubert et al. PLB 123 (1983) 275. Simple Parton Counting Expects One MANY Explanations SLAC E139 J. Gomez et al., PRD 49 (1994) 4348. Precise large-x data Nuclei from A=4 to 197 Conclusions from SLAC data Q2-independent Universal x-dependence (shape) Magnitude varies with A Average Nuclear Density Effect What is the EMC Effect?

  44. New Jefferson Lab EMC Effect Data J. Seelyet al., Phys, Rev. Lett. 103 (2009) 202301. • Plot shows slope of ratio σA/σD at EMC region. • EMC effect correlated with local density not average density.

  45. If the EMC effect is a local density effect, then it seems reasonable to look for connections to other local density effects.

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