"The spin of the nucleon from the HERMES point of view" D. Hasch (Desy)
by
voutier
→
Europe/Paris
Grand amphi (LPSC)
Grand amphi
LPSC
Description
One of the central challenges of contemporary nuclear and high
energy physics is achieving an understanding of how quarks and
gluons combine to make mesons, baryons and nuclei.
One particular issue which has received much attention is how the
constituent-parton spins combine to form the spin of the nucleon.
The objective of the first measurements in {\\it polarised}
Deep Inelastic Scattering (DIS) was to determine what fraction
of the nucleon's spin was carried by the quarks. It came
as a shock to find that the spins of the quarks inside the nucleon
don't combine to form the nucleon spin as expected from the
constituent quark model, but yielded a contribution which was
compatible with zero. These early results from experiments at SLAC
and CERN provoked what was called the \"spin crises\" and initiated
a series of new experiments at laboratories in the U.S. and in
Europe. All these experiments of ever increasing precision confirmed
that the net contribution of the quarks' spins can account for only
a fraction of the nucleon's spin. There must be other substantial
contributions, possibly from gluons exchanged or from the orbital
motion of the quarks and gluons about each other.
HERMES at DESY in Hamburg (Germany) is a second generation experiment
to study the spin structure of the nucleon by measuring not only
inclusive but also semi-inclusive and exclusive processes in polarised
DIS. A comprehensive overview will be given on how to access all the
different contribution to the nucleon spin.