4.4 Review

Using Effective Field Theory to analyse low-energy Compton scattering data from protons and light nuclei

Journal

PROGRESS IN PARTICLE AND NUCLEAR PHYSICS
Volume 67, Issue 4, Pages 841-897

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ppnp.2012.04.003

Keywords

Compton scattering; Proton. neutron and nucleon polarisabilities; Spin polarisabilities; Chiral Perturbation Theory; Effective Field Theory; Delta (1232) resonance

Funding

  1. INT workshop 08-39W: Soft Photons and Light Nuclei (all) and of the INT program 10-01: Simulations and Symmetries
  2. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council grants [ST/F012047/1, ST/J000159/1, ST/F006861/1]
  3. US Department of Energy [DE-FG02-06ER-41422, DE-FG02-95ER-40907, DE-FG02-93ER-40756]
  4. US National Science Foundation CAREER award [PHY-0645498]
  5. University Facilitating Funds of the George Washington University
  6. Science and Technology Facilities Council [ST/J000159/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. STFC [ST/J000159/1] Funding Source: UKRI

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Compton scattering from protons and neutrons provides important insight into the structure of the nucleon. For photon energies up to about 300 MeV, the process can be parameterised by six dynamical dipole polarisabilities which characterise the response of the nucleon to a monochromatic photon of fixed frequency and multipolarity. Their zeroenergy limit yields the well-known static electric and magnetic dipole polarisabilities alpha(E1) and beta(M1), and the four dipole spin polarisabilities. The emergence of full lattice QCD results and new experiments at MAMI (Mainz), Hl gamma S at TUNL, and MAX-Lab (Lund) makes this an opportune time to review nucleon Compton scattering. Chiral Effective Field Theory (chi EFT) provides an ideal analysis tool, since it encodes the well-established low-energy dynamics of QCD while maintaining an appropriately flexible form for the Compton amplitudes of the nucleon. The same chi EFT also describes deuteron and He-3 Compton scattering, using consistent nuclear currents, rescattering and wave functions, and respects the low-energy theorems for photon-nucleus scattering. It can thus also be used to extract useful information on the neutron amplitude from Compton scattering on light nuclei. We summarise past work in chi EFT on all of these reactions and compare with other theoretical approaches. We also discuss all proton experiments up to about 400 MeV, as well as the three modern elastic deuteron data sets, paying particular attention to the precision and accuracy of each set. Constraining the Delta (1232) parameters from the resonance region, we then perform new fits to the proton data up to omega(lab) = 170 MeV, and a new fit to the deuteron data. After checking in each case that a two-parameter fit is compatible with the respective Baldin sum rules, we obtain, using the sum-rule constraints in a one- parameter fit, alpha((P))(E1) = 10.7 +/- 0.3(stat) +/- 0.2(Baldin) +/- 0.8(theory), beta((P))(M1) = 3.1 -/+ 0.3(stat) +/- 0.2(Baldin) +/- 0.8(theory), for the proton polarisabilities, and alpha((S))(E1) = 10.9 +/- 0.9(stat) +/- 0.2(Baldin) +/- 0.8(theory), beta((S))(M1) = 3.6 -/+ 0.9(stat) +/- 0.2(Baldin) +/- 0.8(theory), for the isoscalar polarisabilities, each in units of 10(-4) fm(3). Finally, we discuss plans for polarised Compton scattering on the proton, deuteron, He-3 and heavier targets, their promise as tools to access spin polarisabilities, and other future avenues for theoretical and experimental investigation. (c) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All ri ghts reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available