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1.
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V. Punjabi et al.
Show Abstract
This paper was published online on 20 May 2005 without several of the authors’ corrections incorporated. Equation (13) has been replaced. The captions of Figs. 16–18 have also been replaced. Typographical errors on pages 4, 6, 14, 15, 18, 19, 22, and 24 have all been corrected. The paper has been corrected as of 8 June 2005. The text is correct in the printed version of the journal.
Phys. Rev. C 71, 069902 (2005)
Cited 27 times
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2.
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V. Punjabi et al. Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration
Show Abstract
The ratio of the proton elastic electromagnetic form factors, GEp/GMp, was obtained by measuring Pt and Pℓ, the transverse and longitudinal recoil proton polarization components, respectively, for the elastic e→p→ep→reaction in the four-momentum transfer squared range of 0.5 to 3.5 GeV2. In the single-photon exchange approximation, GEp/GMp is directly proportional to Pt/Pℓ. The simultaneous measurement of Pt and Pℓ in a polarimeter reduces systematic uncertainties. The results for GEp/GMp show a systematic decrease with increasing Q2, indicating for the first time a definite difference in the distribution of charge and magnetization in the proton. The data have been reanalyzed and their systematic uncertainties have become significantly smaller than those reported previously.
Phys. Rev. C 71, 055202 (2005)
Cited 40 times
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3.
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K. G. Fissum et al. Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration
Show Abstract
The physics program in Hall A at Jefferson Lab commenced in the summer of 1997 with a detailed investigation of the 16O(e,e′p) reaction in quasielastic, constant (q,ω) kinematics at Q2≈0.8 (GeV∕c)2, q≈1 GeV∕c, and ω≈445 MeV. Use of a self-calibrating, self-normalizing, thin-film waterfall target enabled a systematically rigorous measurement. Five-fold differential cross-section data for the removal of protons from the 1p-shell have been obtained for 0<pmiss<350 MeV∕c. Six-fold differential cross-section data for 0<Emiss<120 MeV were obtained for 0<pmiss<340 MeV∕c. These results have been used to extract the ALT asymmetry and the RL, RT, RLT, and RL+TT effective response functions over a large range of Emiss and pmiss. Detailed comparisons of the 1p-shell data with Relativistic Distorted-Wave Impulse Approximation (RDWIA), Relativistic Optical-Model Eikonal Approximation (ROMEA), and Relativistic Multiple-Scattering Glauber Approximation (RMSGA) calculations indicate that two-body currents stemming from meson-exchange currents (MEC) and isobar currents (IC) are not needed to explain the data at this Q2. Further, dynamical relativistic effects are strongly indicated by the observed structure in ALT at pmiss≈300 MeV∕c. For 25<Emiss<50 MeV and pmiss≈50 MeV∕c, proton knockout from the 1s1∕2-state dominates, and ROMEA calculations do an excellent job of explaining the data. However, as pmiss increases, the single-particle behavior of the reaction is increasingly hidden by more complicated processes, and for 280<pmiss<340 MeV∕c, ROMEA calculations together with two-body currents stemming from MEC and IC account for the shape and transverse nature of the data, but only about half the magnitude of the measured cross section. For 50<Emiss<120 MeV and 145<pmiss<340 MeV∕c, (e,e′pN) calculations which include the contributions of central and tensor correlations (two-nucleon correlations) together with MEC and IC (two-nucleon currents) account for only about half of the measured cross section. The kinematic consistency of the 1p-shell normalization factors extracted from these data with respect to all available 16O(e,e′p) data is also examined in detail. Finally, the Q2-dependence of the normalization factors is discussed.
Phys. Rev. C 70, 034606 (2004)
Cited 5 times
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4.
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G. Laveissière et al. Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration
Show Abstract
We report a virtual Compton scattering study of the proton at low c.m. energies. We have determined the structure functions PLL-PTT/ϵ and PLT, and the electric and magnetic generalized polarizabilities (GPs) αE(Q2) and βM(Q2) at momentum transfer Q2=0.92 and 1.76 GeV2. The electric GP shows a strong falloff with Q2, and its global behavior does not follow a simple dipole form. The magnetic GP shows a rise and then a falloff; this can be interpreted as the dominance of a long-distance diamagnetic pion cloud at low Q2, compensated at higher Q2 by a paramagnetic contribution from πN intermediate states.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 122001 (2004)
Cited 2 times
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5.
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G. Laveissière et al. Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration
Show Abstract
Exclusive electroproduction of π0 mesons on protons in the backward hemisphere has been studied at Q2=1.0 GeV2 by detecting protons in the forward direction in coincidence with scattered electrons from the 4 GeV electron beam in Jefferson Lab’s Hall A. The data span the range of the total (γ*p) center-of-mass energy W from the pion production threshold to W=2.0 GeV. The differential cross sections σT+ϵσL, σTL, and σTT were separated from the azimuthal distribution and are presented together with the MAID and SAID parametrizations.
Phys. Rev. C 69, 045203 (2004)
Cited 5 times
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6.
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N. Liyanage et al. (The Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration)
Show Abstract
We measured the cross section and response functions for the quasielastic 16O(e,e′p) reaction for missing energies 25≤Em≤120 MeV at missing momenta Pm≤340 MeV/c. For 25<Em<50 MeV and Pm≈60 MeV/c, the reaction is dominated by a single 1s1/2 proton knockout. At larger Pm, the single-particle aspects are increasingly masked by more complicated processes. Calculations which include pion exchange currents, isobar currents, and short-range correlations account for the shape and the transversity, but for only half of the magnitude of the measured cross section.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 5670 (2001)
Cited 4 times
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7.
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S. Malov et al.
Show Abstract
The first (e→,e′p→) polarization transfer measurements on a nucleus heavier than deuterium have been carried out at Jefferson Laboratory. Transverse and longitudinal components of the polarization of protons ejected in the reaction 16O(e→,e′p→ ) were measured in quasielastic perpendicular kinematics at a Q2 of 0.8 (GeV/c)2. The data are in good agreement with state of the art calculations.
Phys. Rev. C 62, 057302 (2000)
Cited 16 times
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8.
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J. Gao et al. (The Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration)
Show Abstract
We have measured the cross section for quasielastic 1p-shell proton knockout in the 16O(e,e′p) reaction at ω = 0.439 GeV and Q2 = 0.8 (GeV/c)2 for missing momentum Pmiss≤355 MeV/c. We have extracted the response functions RL+TT, RT, RLT, and the left-right asymmetry, ALT, for the 1p1/2 and the 1p3/2 states. The data are well described by relativistic distorted wave impulse approximation calculations. At large Pmiss, the structure observed in ALT indicates the existence of dynamical relativistic effects.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 3265 (2000)
Cited 28 times
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9.
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M. K. Jones et al. (The Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration)
Show Abstract
The ratio of the proton's elastic electromagnetic form factors, GEp/GMp, was obtained by measuring Pt and Pℓ, the transverse and the longitudinal recoil proton polarization, respectively. For elastic e→p→ep→, GEp/GMp is proportional to Pt/Pℓ. Simultaneous measurement of Pt and Pℓ in a polarimeter provides good control of the systematic uncertainty. The results for the ratio GEp/GMp show a systematic decrease as Q2 increases from 0.5 to 3.5 GeV2, indicating for the first time a definite difference in the spatial distribution of charge and magnetization currents in the proton.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 1398 (2000)
Cited 195 times
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10.
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L. C. Alexa et al. (The Jefferson Lab Hall A Collaboration)
Show Abstract
The deuteron elastic structure function A(Q2) has been extracted in the range 0.7≤Q2≤6.0 (GeV/c)2 from cross section measurements of elastic electron-deuteron scattering in coincidence using the Hall A Facility of Jefferson Laboratory. The data are compared to theoretical models, based on the impulse approximation with the inclusion of meson-exchange currents, and to predictions of quark dimensional scaling and perturbative quantum chromodynamics.
Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 1374 (1999)
Cited 34 times
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