Conference Room B-221, Building 203,
Argonne National Laboratory
at 10:00 am
Chao Peng
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Probing the Nucleon Structure with Inclusive Electron Scattering
Host: Zein-Eddine Meziani
14 August 2019
Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the fundamental theory of strong
interaction in terms of quarks and gluons, has achieved great success from
experimental tests at high energies, where perturbative calculations can be
carried out. However, many essential questions regarding the confinement of
quarks and gluons remain in the non-perturbative region. The nucleon can be
viewed as a natural test laboratory with confined quarks and gluons, and thus
the knowledge about its internal structure is critical to understand low energy
QCD. In this talk, I will present details of two experiments, E97-110 (Hall A,
Jefferson Lab) and PRad (Hall B, Jefferson Lab), that study the nucleon
structure with inclusive measurements of electron scattering. Experiment
E97-110 measures the asymmetries from longitudinally-polarized electrons
scattering off a longitudinally or transversely polarized 3He gas target. Its
results can test predictions of Chiral Effective Field Theory regarding the
neutron spin structure through various sum rules. The PRad Experiment aims
to resolve the “proton radius puzzle” by extracting the proton charge radius
from a high precision inclusive measurement of unpolarized electron-proton
scattering.
Debbie Beres, Secretary (+1-630-252-4100,
[email protected] )
Paul E. Reimer
[email protected]
18 June 2018