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Phys. Rev. C 63, 025501 (2001) [18 pages]

Parity violating measurements of neutron densities

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C. J. Horowitz*
Department of Physics and Nuclear Theory Center, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 47405

S. J. Pollock
Department of Physics, CB 390, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309

P. A. Souder
Department of Physics, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244

R. Michaels§
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility, Newport News, Virginia 23606

Received 6 January 2000; revised 12 July 2000; published 8 January 2001

Parity violating electron nucleus scattering is a clean and powerful tool for measuring the spatial distributions of neutrons in nuclei with unprecedented accuracy. Parity violation arises from the interference of electromagnetic and weak neutral amplitudes, and the Z0 of the standard model couples primarily to neutrons at low Q2. The data can be interpreted with as much confidence as electromagnetic scattering. After briefly reviewing the present theoretical and experimental knowledge of neutron densities, we discuss possible parity violation measurements, their theoretical interpretation, and applications. The experiments are feasible at existing facilities. We show that theoretical corrections are either small or well understood, which makes the interpretation clean. The quantitative relationship to atomic parity nonconservation observables is examined, and we show that the electron scattering asymmetries can be directly applied to atomic parity nonconservation because the observables have approximately the same dependence on nuclear shape.

© 2001 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevC.63.025501
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevC.63.025501
PACS:
24.80.+y, 21.10.Gv, 25.30.Bf

*Electronic address: charlie@iucf.indiana.edu

Electronic address: Steven.Pollock@colorado.edu

Electronic address: souder@suhep.phy.syr.edu

§Electronic address: rom@jlab.org