Nucleon charge symmetry breaking and parity violating electron-proton scattering
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review C
- Vol. 57 (3) , 1492-1505
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.57.1492
Abstract
The consequences of the charge symmetry breaking effects of the mass difference between the up and down quarks and electromagnetic effects for searches for strangeness form factors in parity violating electron scattering from the proton are investigated. The formalism necessary to identify and compute the relevant observables is developed by separating the Hamiltonian into charge symmetry conserving and breaking terms. Using a set of SU(6) nonrelativistic quark models, the effects of the charge symmetry breaking Hamiltonian are considered for experimentally relevant values of the momentum transfer and found to be less than about 1%. The charge symmetry breaking corrections to the Bjorken sum rule are also studied and shown to vanish in first-order perturbation theory.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Measurement of the Proton's Neutral Weak Magnetic Form FactorPhysical Review Letters, 1997
- Precision Measurement of the Proton Spin Structure FunctionPhysical Review Letters, 1995
- Measurement of the spin-dependent structure function g1(x) of the protonPhysics Letters B, 1994
- Intermediate-energy semileptonic probes of the hadronic neutral currentPhysics Reports, 1994
- Measurement of the spin-dependent structure function g1(x) of the deuteronPhysics Letters B, 1993
- Charge symmetry, quarks and mesonsPhysics Reports, 1990
- An investigation of the spin structure of the proton in deep inelastic scattering of polarised muons on polarised protonsNuclear Physics B, 1989
- Strange-quark vector currents and parity-violating electron scattering from the nucleon and from nucleiPhysical Review D, 1989
- Sensitivity of polarized elastic electron-proton scattering to the anomalous baryon number magnetic momentPhysics Letters B, 1989
- Strange matrix elements in the proton from neutral-current experimentsNuclear Physics B, 1988