We report the first measurement of the average of the electron-proton and positron-proton elastic scattering cross sections. This lepton charge-averaged cross section is insensitive to the leading ...effects of hard two-photon exchange, giving more robust access to the proton's electromagnetic form factors. The cross section was extracted from data taken by the OLYMPUS experiment at DESY, in which alternating stored electron and positron beams were scattered from a windowless gaseous hydrogen target. Elastic scattering events were identified from the coincident detection of the scattered lepton and recoil proton in a large-acceptance toroidal spectrometer. The luminosity was determined from the rates of Møller, Bhabha, and elastic scattering in forward electromagnetic calorimeters. The data provide some selectivity between existing form factor global fits and will provide valuable constraints to future fits.
The secondary proton polarization and differential cross sections of the (
) inelastic reaction on nuclei
Be and
Zr at the initial proton energy of 1 GeV were measured over a wide range of the ...scattered proton momenta at a laboratory angle of
. Scattered protons were detected by means of the magnetic spectrometer equipped with a polarimeter based on multiwire proportional chambers and carbon analyzer. A structure in the polarization and cross section data, related probably to the quasielastic scattering off nucleon correlations in the
Be and
Zr nuclei, was observed as earlier in the same data for the
C,
Si,
Ca and
Fe nuclei. A difference in the momentum distributions of the scattering cross section ratios for the
Zr and
C nuclei and for the
Zr and
Be nuclei was observed.
The differential cross sections of the (
p, p
′) inelastic reaction on nuclei
12
C,
28
Si,
40
Ca, and
56
Fe at the initial proton energy of 1 GeV were measured over a wide range of the scattered ...proton momenta at a laboratory angle of Θ = 21°. Scattered protons were detected by means of the magnetic spectrometer equipped with a polarimeter based on multiwire proportional chambers. Momentum intervals were observed in which the ratios of the scattering cross sections off the nuclei do not depend on the scattered proton momentum (i.e., scaling).
The secondary proton polarization, differential cross section, and cross section ratios were measured in the (p, p') inelastic reaction with nuclei at 1 GeV and a laboratory scattering angle of Θ = ...210. The data were obtained over a wide range of the scattered proton momentum covering the pN quasielastic peak and high momentum region up to a momentum corresponding to excited level of the nucleus under investigation. Scattered protons were detected by the magnetic spectrometer equipped with a polarimeter based on multiwire proportional chambers and carbon analyzer. A structure in the polarization and cross section data, possibly related to the in-medium elastic scattering on nucleon correlations arising in nuclei, and a scaling of the scattering cross section ratios of the nuclei were observed in the high momentum range.
The secondary-proton polarization and differential cross sections for the (
p, p'
) inelastic reaction on
28
Si and
56
Fe nuclei at the initial proton energy of 1 GeV were measured over a wide range ...of the scattered-proton momenta at a laboratory angle of Θ = 21◦. Scattered protons were detected by means of a magnetic spectrometer equipped with a polarimeter based on multiwire proportional chambers and a carbon analyzer. A structure in the polarization and cross section data, which is probably related to quasielastic scattering off nucleon correlations in the
28
Si and
56
Fe nuclei, was observed as earlier in the analogous data for
12
C and
40
Ca nuclei. Momentum intervals within which cross-section ratios for nuclei did not depend on the scattered-proton momentum were found.
The polarization of secondary protons in the (
p, p
’) inelastic reactions on
40
Ca and
12
C nuclei at the initial proton energy of 1 GeV was measured over a wide range of scattered-proton momenta at ...a laboratory angle of Θ = 21°. The reaction cross sections were also measured. Scattered protons were detected by means of magnetic spectrometer equipped with a polarimeter based on multiwire-proportional chambers. A structure in the polarization and cross-section data, which is probably related to scattering off nucleon correlations in the nuclei involved, was observed.
The OLYMPUS Collaboration reports on a precision measurement of the positron-proton to electron-proton elastic cross section ratio, R_{2γ}, a direct measure of the contribution of hard two-photon ...exchange to the elastic cross section. In the OLYMPUS measurement, 2.01 GeV electron and positron beams were directed through a hydrogen gas target internal to the DORIS storage ring at DESY. A toroidal magnetic spectrometer instrumented with drift chambers and time-of-flight scintillators detected elastically scattered leptons in coincidence with recoiling protons over a scattering angle range of ≈20° to 80°. The relative luminosity between the two beam species was monitored using tracking telescopes of interleaved gas electron multiplier and multiwire proportional chamber detectors at 12°, as well as symmetric Møller or Bhabha calorimeters at 1.29°. A total integrated luminosity of 4.5 fb^{-1} was collected. In the extraction of R_{2γ}, radiative effects were taken into account using a Monte Carlo generator to simulate the convolutions of internal bremsstrahlung with experiment-specific conditions such as detector acceptance and reconstruction efficiency. The resulting values of R_{2γ}, presented here for a wide range of virtual photon polarization 0.456<ε<0.978, are smaller than some hadronic two-photon exchange calculations predict, but are in reasonable agreement with a subtracted dispersion model and a phenomenological fit to the form factor data.
The OLYMPUS experiment Milner, R.; Hasell, D.K.; Kohl, M. ...
Nuclear instruments & methods in physics research. Section A, Accelerators, spectrometers, detectors and associated equipment,
03/2014, Letnik:
741
Journal Article
Recenzirano
Odprti dostop
The OLYMPUS experiment was designed to measure the ratio between the positron–proton and electron–proton elastic scattering cross-sections, with the goal of determining the contribution of two-photon ...exchange to the elastic cross-section. Two-photon exchange might resolve the discrepancy between measurements of the proton form factor ratio, μpGEp/GMp, made using polarization techniques and those made in unpolarized experiments. OLYMPUS operated on the DORIS storage ring at DESY, alternating between 2.01GeV electron and positron beams incident on an internal hydrogen gas target. The experiment used a toroidal magnetic spectrometer instrumented with drift chambers and time-of-flight detectors to measure rates for elastic scattering over the polar angular range of approximately 25°–75°. Symmetric Møller/Bhabha calorimeters at 1.29° and telescopes of GEM and MWPC detectors at 12° served as luminosity monitors. A total luminosity of approximately 4.5fb−1 was collected over two running periods in 2012. This paper provides details on the accelerator, target, detectors, and operation of the experiment.