Roper Resonance Structure and Exploration of Emergent Hadron Mass from CLAS Electroproduction Data
Abstract
The N(1440)1/2+ nucleon resonance, first identified in 1964 by L.D. Roper and collaborators in analyses of π N hadroproduction data have continued to provide pivotal insights that serve to advance our understanding of nucleon excited states. In this contribution, we present results from studies of the structure of the Roper resonance based on exclusive π N and π+π-p electroproduction data measured with the CLAS detector at Jefferson Lab. These analyses have revealed the Roper resonance as a complex interplay between an inner core of three dressed quarks and an external meson--baryon cloud. Analyses of the CLAS results on the evolution of the Roper resonance electroexcitation amplitudes with photon virtuality Q2, within the framework of the Continuum Schwinger Method, have conclusively demonstrated the capability to gain insight into the strong interaction dynamics responsible for generating more than 98\% of hadron mass. Further extension of such studies to higher Q2--through experiments currently underway with the CLAS12 detector and in the future with a potential CEBAF energy upgrade to 22 GeV--offers the only foreseeable opportunity to explore the full range of distances where the dominant portion of hadron mass and resonance structure emerges.
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