Searching for an Enhanced Signal of the Onset of Color Transparency in Baryons with D(e,e′p)n Scattering

Author:

Li Shujie,Yero CarlosORCID,West Jennifer RittenhouseORCID,Bennett Clare,Cosyn WimORCID,Higinbotham DouglasORCID,Sargsian Misak,Szumila-Vance HollyORCID

Abstract

Observation of the onset of color transparency in baryons would provide a new means of studying the nuclear strong force and would be the first clear evidence of baryons transforming into a color-neutral point-like size in the nucleus as predicted by quantum chromodynamics. Recent C(e,e′p) results from electron-scattering did not observe the onset of color transparency (CT) in protons up to spacelike four-momentum transfers squared, Q2=14.2 GeV2. The traditional methods of searching for CT in (e,e′p) scattering use heavy targets favoring kinematics with already initially reduced final state interactions (FSIs) such that any CT effect that further reduces FSIs will be small. The reasoning behind this choice is the difficulty in accounting for all FSIs. D(e,e′p)n, on the other hand, has well-understood FSI contributions from double scattering with a known dependence on the kinematics and can show an increased sensitivity to hadrons in point-like configurations. Double scattering is the square of the re-scattering amplitude in which the knocked-out nucleon interacts with the spectator nucleon, a process that is suppressed in the presence of point-like configurations and is particularly well-studied for the deuteron. This suppression yields a quadratic sensitivity to CT effects and is strongly dependent on the choice of kinematics. Here, we describe a possible Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) electron-scattering experiment that utilizes these kinematics and explores the potential signal for the onset of CT with enhanced sensitivity as compared to recent experiments.

Funder

Department of Energy

Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics

National Science Foundation MPS-Ascend Postdoctoral Research Fellowship

Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) programs of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

National Science Foundation

U.S. DOE Office of Nuclear Physics

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy

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