Measurement of the Two-Photon Exchange Contribution to Elastic Lepton-Proton Scattering at the OLYMPUS Experiment
Abstract
Measurements of the ratio of the proton elastic form factors (μpGE/GM) using Rosenbluth separation and those using polarization-based techniques show a strong discrepancy, which increases as a function of Q2. The contribution of hard two-photon exchange (TPE) to e-p scattering, which is neglected in the standard treatments of elastic e-p scattering, is the most widely-accepted hypothesis for the explanation of this discrepancy. While calculations of the hard TPE contribution are highly model dependent, the effect may be quantified experimentally by precisely measuring the ratio of the positron-proton and electron-proton elastic scattering cross sections. The OLYMPUS experiment collected approximately 4 fb-1 of e+p and e-p scattering data at the DORIS storage ring at DESY in 2012, with the goal of measuring the elastic σe+p/σe-p ratio over the kinematic range (0.4 ≤ ε ≤ 0.9), (0.6 ≤ Q2 ≤ 2.2) GeV2/c2 at a fixed lepton beam energy of 2.01 GeV. Initial results from OLYMPUS were presented, and subsequently results on R2γ = σe+p/σe-p from the experiment have been publicly released and are in preparation for publication.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.