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The OLYMPUS experiment measured the two-photon exchange contribution to elastic electron-proton scattering, over a range of four-momentum transfer from \(0.6 < Q^2 < 2.2\) \((\mathrm{GeV/c})^2\). The motivation for the experiment stemmed from measurements of the electric-to-magnetic form factor ratio of the proton \(\mu G_E/G_M\) extracted from polarization observables in

The OLYMPUS experiment measured the two-photon exchange contribution to elastic electron-proton scattering, over a range of four-momentum transfer from \(0.6 < Q^2 < 2.2\) \((\mathrm{GeV/c})^2\). The motivation for the experiment stemmed from measurements of the electric-to-magnetic form factor ratio of the proton \(\mu G_E/G_M\) extracted from polarization observables in polarized electron-proton scattering. Polarized electron-proton scattering experiments have revealed a significant decrease in \(\mu G_E/G_M\) at large \(Q^2\), in contrast to previous measurements from unpolarized electron-proton scattering. The commonly accepted hypothesis is that the discrepancy in the form factor ratio is due to neglected higher-order terms in the elastic electron-proton scattering cross section, in particular the two-photon exchange amplitude.

The goal of OLYMPUS was to measure the two-photon exchange contribution by measuring the positron-proton to electron-proton elastic scattering cross section ratio, \(\sigma_{e^+p}/\sigma_{e^-p}\). The two-photon exchange contribution is correlated to the deviation of the cross section ratio from unity.

In 2012, the OLYMPUS experiment collected over 4 fb\(^{-1}\) of \(e^+p\) and \(e^-p\) scattering data using electron and positron beams incident on a hydrogen gas target. The scattered leptons and protons were measured exclusively with a large acceptance spectrometer. OLYMPUS observed a slight rise in \(\sigma_{e^+p}/\sigma_{e^-p}\) of at most 1-2\% over a \(Q^2\) range of \(0.6 < Q^2 < 2.2\) \((\mathrm{GeV/c})^2\). This work discusses the motivations, experiment, analysis method, and the preliminary results for the cross section ratio as measured by OLYMPUS.
ContributorsIce, Lauren (Author) / Alarcon, Ricardo O (Thesis advisor) / Dugger, Michael (Committee member) / Lebed, Richard (Committee member) / Ritchie, Barry (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
The spectra of predicted particles from elementary quark models (CQMs) are expansive, accurate for the low-lying spectra, but incomplete. The GlueX experiment at Jefferson Lab is a vehicle to study medium energy photoproduction of hadronic states. The primary goal of the GlueX collaboration is to study Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD, also

The spectra of predicted particles from elementary quark models (CQMs) are expansive, accurate for the low-lying spectra, but incomplete. The GlueX experiment at Jefferson Lab is a vehicle to study medium energy photoproduction of hadronic states. The primary goal of the GlueX collaboration is to study Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD, also known as the strong nuclear force) and the nature of quark confinement. The GlueX collaboration uses a polarized photon beam incident on a liquid hydrogen target (LH2) to investigate the aftermath of photon-proton interactions.The cascade baryons, denoted by Ξ, are defined by having two, second-generation, strange quarks with an additional first-generation light quark (u or d). Experimentally, few cascades have been discovered, which is the antithesis of what most models expect. The cascades have some favorable attributes but are difficult to detect because the production cross sections are small and direct production is unlikely. Fortunately, in the 12 GeV era of the GlueX experiment, there is sufficient energy, beam time and data analysis tools for the detection of excited cascade states and their properties. From the reaction γp→K^+ K^+ Ξ^- π^0, the invariant mass spectra of Ξ^- π^0 system was surveyed for new possible resonances. The invariant mass spectrum has a strong Ξ(1530) signal with other smaller resonances throughout the spectrum. Preliminary cross sections for the Ξ(1530) that was photoproduced from the proton are presented at energies never before explored. While the Ξ(1530) couples almost exclusively to the Ξπ channel, there is an easily identifiable Ξ(1690) signal decaying Ξπ. Through the use of a simultaneous fitting routing of the Ξ*- mass spectra, I was able to observe the Ξ(1690) decaying to the KΛ, as well as to the Ξ-π0 branch. With additional statistics, a measurement of the branching ratio should be possible. Lastly, a partial wave analysis (PWA) was completed to verify that the total angular momentum of Ξ(1530) is J = 3/2 and consistent with having positive parity. Additionally, there is evidence of a potentially interesting feature slightly above the mass of the Ξ(1530) that should be more fully explored as new GlueX data becomes available.
ContributorsSumner, Brandon Christopher Lamont (Author) / Dugger, Michael (Thesis advisor) / Ritchie, Barry (Committee member) / Lebed, Richard (Committee member) / Alarcon, Ricardo (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Precision measurements of kinematic correlation parameters of free neutron decayserve as a powerful probe of the Standard Model of particle physics. A wide array of Beyond the Standard Model physics theories can be probed by precision neutron physics. The Nab experiment will measure a, the electron-neutrino correlation coefficient, and b, the Fierz

Precision measurements of kinematic correlation parameters of free neutron decayserve as a powerful probe of the Standard Model of particle physics. A wide array of Beyond the Standard Model physics theories can be probed by precision neutron physics. The Nab experiment will measure a, the electron-neutrino correlation coefficient, and b, the Fierz interference term. a is amongst the most sensitive decay parameters to λ = gA/gV , the ratio of the axial-vector and vector coupling constants in the weak force. Two important systematic considerations for the Nab experiment are average detector timing bias, which must be held to ≤ 0.3 ns, and energy calibration and linearity, which must be held to 1 part in 104 . Both systematics require an in depth understanding of charge collection in Nab’s Si detectors. Simulation of Si charge collection using numerical methods and the Shockley-Ramo Theorem has been completed. A variety of detector tests, including detector and amplification electronics acceptance testing have also been completed. Also included in this dissertation is my work with the Nab ultra-high vacuum and cryogenic system.
ContributorsRandall, Glenn (Author) / Alarcon, Ricardo (Thesis advisor) / Chamberlin, Ralph (Committee member) / Dugger, Michael (Committee member) / Lebed, Richard (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021