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All about the size: puzzle of proton charge radius

All about the size: puzzle of proton charge radius. Chung-Wen Kao Chung-Yuan Christian University, Taiwan. March 22 nd 2012, Colloquium Institute of physics, NCTU. Discovery of Proton(1917).

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All about the size: puzzle of proton charge radius

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  1. All about the size: puzzle of proton charge radius Chung-Wen Kao Chung-Yuan Christian University, Taiwan March 22nd 2012, Colloquium Institute of physics, NCTU

  2. Discovery of Proton(1917) In 1917Rutherford proved that the hydrogen nucleus is present in other nuclei, a result usually described as the discovery of the proton. He noticed that when alpha particles were shot into nitrogen gas, his scintillation detectors showed the signatures of hydrogen nuclei. Rutherford determined that this hydrogen could only have come from the nitrogen, and therefore nitrogen must contain hydrogen nuclei. The hydrogen nucleus is therefore present in other nuclei as an elementary particle, which Rutherford named the proton, after the neuter singular of the Greek word for "first", πρῶτον.He found the protons mass at 1,836 times as great as the mass of the electron.

  3. Ernest Rutherford Ernest Rutherford, 1st Baron Rutherford of Nelson, (B.1871–D. 1937) was a New Zealand physicist who became known as the father of nuclear physics. He discovered that atoms have their positive charge concentrated in a very small nucleus, and thereby pioneered the Rutherford model, or planetary, model of the atom, through his discovery and interpretation of Rutherford scattering in his gold foil experiment. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1908. He is widely credited as splitting the atom in 1917 and leading the first experiment to "split the nucleus“ in a controlled manner by two students under his direction, John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton in 1932. A plaque commemorating Rutherford's presence at the Victoria University, Manchester.

  4. He is so successful even to become bill… Ernest Rutherford (1871-1937).  Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1908.Knighted in 1914, Order of Merit in 1924, Baron in 1931. Per saltire arched Gules and Or, two inescutcheonsvoided of the first in fess, within each a martlet Sable.Crest:  A baron's coronet.  On a helm wreathed of the Colors,a kiwi Proper.  Mantling: Or and Gules.Supporters:   Dexter,  Hermes Trismegistus  (patron saintof knowledge and alchemists). Sinister,  a Maori warrior.Motto:Primordia Quaerere Rerum("To seek the first principles of things." Lucretius.)

  5. Quotations of Rutherford “All science is either physics or stamp collecting.” “If your experiment needs statistics, you ought to have done a better experiment.” The only possible conclusion the social sciences can draw is: some do, some don't” “Anyone who expects a source of power from the transformation of the atom is talking moonshine” “We haven't got the money, so we've got to think!” Don't let me catch anyone talking about the universe in my department” I've just finished reading some of my early papers, and you know, when I'd finished I said to myself, 'Rutherford, my boy, you used to be a damned clever fellow.'

  6. Quotations of Rutherford But no Anglo-Saxon can understand relativity.Said at a dinner in 1910, teasing Ernest Rutherford, who replied, 'No, they have too much sense.' — Wilhelm Wien Of all created comforts, God is the lender; you are the borrower, not the owner. You should never bet against anything in science at odds of more than about 10~12 to 1. If you can't explain your physics to a barmaid it is probably not very good physics The more physics you have the less engineering you need

  7. Spin of proton (1927) The first indication that the proton had spin 1/2 came from the observation of an anomaly in the specific heat of the molecular hydrogen.The specific heats of para- and ortho-hydrogen are quite different at low temperatures. If one combines these two curves in the ratio 1 part para to 3 parts ortho, one obtains a smoothly decreasing curve that agrees well with experiment.

  8. Spin of proton (1927) This puzle can be solved assuming the protom has spin one half.If protons have spin 1/2, the two protons inside the hydrogen can have a spin 1 and hence a symmetric wave function – this is called orthohydrogen – or a spin 0, with an antisymmetric wave function, which is called parahydrogen. These two protons are bound by a potential which is produced by the electrons, and they have rotation levels (vibrations also exist but are much higher). Orthohydrogen has only odd angular momentum rotation levels because of the Pauli principle for protons, while parahydrogen has only even rotation levels. Taking this into account in counting the degrees of freedom of hydrogen, with a ratio 3:1 of ortho parahydrogen at room temperature.

  9. g factor of proton (1933) Not only the electrons have the spin in the atom but also the nucleons. But the proton and the neutron have much bigger masses than the electron (saying more exactly about 1836 times bigger). And the magnetic dipole moment is inversely proportional to the mass of the particle. So the moments of the proton and the neutron are very small in comparison with the moment of the electron. Stern, Frish, and Easterman measured those tiny magnetic dipoles in 1933. Proton: g = 5.5856912 +/- 0.0000022 Neutron: g = -3.8260837 +/- 0.0000018

  10. Pauli and his advice Pauli and Stern were great friends, which meant they were always arguing. Pauli had advised Stern not to measure the magnetic moment of the proton because according to the new formulated Dirac theory, the g value of point-like spin ½ particle must be 2! Lucky for Stern who didn’t follow Pauli’s advice and found that the g value of the proton is not 2 which means the proton is not point-like particle even it is very small. Only till 1960s, people could estimate the size of the proton directly by experiment of form factors… Hahaha… Lucky me not to listen to you…. Damn it, I cannot believe I am wrong…. Again!

  11. The size of nuclei The mutual Coulomb repulsion of an alpha particle and a target nucleus give rise to a predictable trajectory and led to the development of the Rutherford formula. As the Geiger-Marsden data shows, the data are in agreement with the formula for a wide range of angles. With high enough alpha energies, however, the projectile punches in close enough to the nuclear center to come into range of the nuclear strong force and the distribution of scattered alphas departs from the Rutherford formula. Eisberg, R. M. and Porter, C. E., Rev. Mod. Phys. 33, 190 (1961)

  12. Nucleon E.M form factors "for his pioneering studies of electron scattering in atomic nuclei and for his thereby achieved discoveries concerning the structure of the nucleons • Hofstadterdetermined the precise size of the proton and neutron by measuring their form factor in 1961.

  13. Rosenbluth Separation Method Within one-photon-exchange framework:

  14. Finite size of the proton ep-elastic Finite size of the proton ed-elastic: Finite size + nuclear structure R. Hofstadter, Rev. Mod. Phys. 56 (1956) 214

  15. Hofstadter and SLAC • Sometime during the year 1954, in a small informal meeting in the living room of a colleague, Hofstadter suggested the rather outlandish idea (for those days) that Stanford might undertake to construct a one-mile-long linear electron accelerator. The others present were enthusiastic, and the idea was dubbed "Project M," for "monster." It soon became even more of a monster as its proposed dimensions grew from one mile in length to two, and the number of people involved mushroomed. Eventually known as "SLAC" (Stanford Linear Accelerator Center), this pioneering accelerator was built during the mid-1960's, and had its first runs in about 1967, which soon led to the discovery of partons and in 1974, to the "November Revolution", which provided a solid basis for the quark picture of hadrons.

  16. The size of the proton? Charge Radius Breit Frame. q0=0

  17. The proton size and hydrogen spectrum • There is another way to measure the proton charge radius and it can research higher precision. It is through the spectrum of hydrogen. • Usually the proton is treated as a point charge since the Bohr radius is about 104~105 times larger than the size of the proton. • However when the precision of measurement of the spectrum is high enough, the finite size of the proton will become measurable. • To be more specific, let us review the spectrum of the hydrogen.

  18. Spectrum of Hydrogen atom

  19. Energy scales in spectrum 1 kHz=103 Hz 1 MHz=106 Hz 1GHz=109 Hz 1 THz=1012 Hz 1PHz=1015 Hz 1 μeV=10-6 eV 1 meV=10-3 eV 1 keV=103 eV 1 MeV=106 eV 1GeV=109 eV 1TeV=1012 eV

  20. Spectrum of Hydrogen atom

  21. The size of proton and Lamb shift • Bound state QED started in 1947, when the Lamb shift between the 2S1/2 and the 2P1/2 state of the hydrogen atom was found. • The Lamb shift is the splitting of an energy level caused by the radiative corrections such as vacuum polarization, electron self-energy and vertex correction. • The proton charge radius is the limiting factor when comparing experiments to QED theory, so we need for a more precise measurement of rp.

  22. Lamb shift (1947) In 1947, Willis Lamb discovered that the 2p1/2 state is slightly lower than the 2s1/2state resulting in a slight shift of the corresponding spectral line. It was a puzzle because due to Dirac equation two states are degenerate.

  23. How Lamb measured it? Willis Lamb formed a beam of hydrogen atoms in the 2s1/2 state. These atoms could not directly take the transition to the 1s1/2 state because of the selection rule which requires the orbital angular momentum to change by 1 unit in a transition. Putting the atoms in a magnetic field to split the levels by the Zeeman effect, he exposed the atoms to microwave radiation at 2395 MHz (not too far from the ordinary microwave oven frequency of 2560 MHz). Then he varied the magnetic field until that frequency produced transitions from the 2p1/2 to 2p3/2 levels. He could then measure the allowed transition from the 2p3/2 to the 1s1/2 state. He used the results to determine that the zero-magnetic field splitting of these levels correspond to 1057 MHz.

  24. How Lamb measured it?

  25. Who is Lamb? Willis Eugene Lamb, Jr. (B.1913 – D. 2008) was an American physicist who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1955 "for his discoveries concerning the fine structure of the hydrogen spectrum". Lamb and Polykarp Kusch were able to precisely determine certain electromagnetic properties of the electron.

  26. Lamb Shift: QED calculation k(n,0) is a numerical factor which varies slightly with n from 12.7 to 13.2. k(n,l) is a small numerical factor <0.05

  27. Nuclear finite size in spectrum The nuclear finite size effects appear in the Lamb shift: The nuclear finite size effects also appear in the hyperfine splitting:

  28. Measurement of Lamb shift (measured directly) (the Lamb shift deduced from the measured fine structure interval 2p3/2 − 2s1/2)

  29. Charge radius of Proton from Lamb shift measurement

  30. What is CODATA? The Committee on Data for Science and Technology (CODATA) was established in 1966 as an interdisciplinary committee of the International Council for Science. It seeks to improve the compilation, critical evaluation, storage, and retrieval of data of importance to science and technology. The CODATA Task Group on Fundamental Constants was established in 1969. Its purpose is to periodically provide the international scientific and technological communities with an internationally accepted set of values of the fundamental physical constants and closely related conversion factors for use worldwide. The first such CODATA set was published in 1973, later in 1986, 1998, 2002 and the fifth in 2006. The latest version is Ver.6.0 called "2010CODATA" published on 2011-06-02. The CODATA recommended values of fundamental physical constants are published at the NIST Reference on Constants, Units, and Uncertainty. CODATA sponsors the CODATA international conference every two years.

  31. Muonic hydrogen • The muon is about 200 times heavier than the electron Therefore, the atomic Bohr radius of muonic hydrogen is smaller than in ordinary hydrogen. • The μp Lamb shift, ΔE(2P-2S) ≈ 0.2 eV, is dominated by vacuum polarization which shifts the 2S binding energy towards more negative values . The μp fine- and hyperfine splitting are an order of magnitude smaller than the Lamb shift. The relative contribution of the proton size to ΔE(2P-2S) is as much as 1.8%, two orders of magnitude more than for normal hydrogen atoms. • Thus, the measurement of the Lamb shift of muonic hydrogen allows a more accurate determination of the size of the proton!

  32. Muonic hydrogen Lamb shift 1 kHz=103 Hz 1 MHz=106 Hz 1GHz=109 Hz 1 THz=1012 Hz 1PHz=1015 Hz

  33. Hard work for 40 years • This kind of measurement has been considered for over 40 years, but only recent developements in laser technology and muon beams made it feasible to carry it out • The experiment is located at a new beam‐line for low‐energy (5keV) muons of the proton accelerator at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) in Switzerlan

  34. Muonic hydrogen Spectrum

  35. Surprisingly new result! To match the 2010 value with the CODATA value, an additional term of 0.31meV would be required in the QED equation. This corresponds to 64 times its claimed uncertainty!

  36. Surprisingly new result! • The transition frequency between 2P3/2 and 1S1/2 is obtained to be Δν = 49881.88(77) GHz , corresponding to an energy difference of ΔE = 206.2949(32) meV • Theory predicts a value of ΔE = 209.9779(49) ‐ 5.2262 rp² + 0.0347 rp³ meV [rp in fm] • This results in a proton radius of rp = 0.84184(36) fm 4% smaller than the previous best estimate, which has been the average of many different measurements made over the years.

  37. Puzzle about the proton size

  38. Third Zeemach moment If GE is dipole form

  39. Four possibilities • The experimental results are not right. • The relevant QED calculations are incorrect. • There is, at extremely low energies and at the level of accuracy of the atomic experiments, physics beyond the standard model appears. • A single-dipole form factor is not adequate to the analysis of precise low-energy data.

  40. New Physics? V. Barger Cheng-Wei Chiang, Wai-Yee Keung, and Danny Marfatia explore the possibility that new scalar, pseudoscalar, vector, axial-vector, and tensor flavor-conserving nonuniversal interactions may be responsible for the discrepancy. They consider exotic particles that among leptons, couple preferentially to muons and find that the many constraints from low energy data disfavor new spin-0, spin-1 and spin-2 particles as an explanation. Phys.Rev.Lett.106:153001,2011

  41. New Physics? The 95% C. L. range of / required to reproduce the muonic Lamb shift is indicated by the green shaded region. The black solid, red dashed and blue dot-dashed lines are the upper limits for vector, scalar and spin-2 particles, respectively, from a combination of n−208Pb scattering data and the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. The black dotted curve is the upper bound obtained from atomic X-ray transitions. All bounds are at the 95% C. L. Phys.Rev.Lett.106:153001,2011

  42. Incorrect QED calculation? • Although QED is very successful theory, nevertheless, to calculate the energy levels of the bounded electron is much more complicated than the usual computation of the cross sections of the scattering processes. • It is not entirely impossible the previous QED calculation is not good enough. • Furthermore, the calculation of Lamb shift is also involved with the hadronic uncertainty, more prudent exam is needed.

  43. How to calculate it? To calculate the theoretical shift corresponding to the measured transition, some have used perturbation theory with non-relativistic wave-functions to predict the size of the contributing effects, including relativistic effects. Alternatively one can use the Dirac equation for the muon with the appropriate potential as an effective approximation to the two-particle Bethe-Saltpeter equation to calculate the perturbed wave-functions. But the result is close to the previous ones. Phys. Rev. A 84, 012506 (2011)

  44. Higher order QED calculation • one-loop electron self-energy and vacuum polarization • two-loops • three-loops • pure recoil correction • radiative recoil correction • finite nuclear size corrections By Pachucki

  45. Perturbative v.s. Perturbative J. D. Carroll, A. W. Thomas, J. Rafelski, G. A. Miller Phys. Rev. A 84, 012506 (2011)

  46. Perturbative v.s. Perturbative Phys. Rev. A 84, 012506 (2011) J. D. Carroll, A. W. Thomas, J. Rafelski, G. A. Miller

  47. TPE and Lamb shift

  48. Dispersion relation calculation The imaginary part of TPE is related to the structure functions measured in DIS Dispersion relations:

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