7–11 Sept 2015
Ecole Polytechnique
Europe/Zurich timezone

Session

Future facilities Parallel

11 Sept 2015, 11:00
Amphi Gay-Lussac (Ecole Polytechnique)

Amphi Gay-Lussac

Ecole Polytechnique

Palaiseau, FRANCE

Conveners

Future facilities Parallel

  • Charles Hyde (Old Dominion University)

Description

Future facilities Parallel session

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Dr Alexander Kiselev (Brookhaven National Lab)
    11/09/2015, 11:00
    Future DIS facilities
    Oral Presentation
    Construction of an Electron-Ion Collider with luminosities exceeding $10^{33} cm^{−1}s^{−1}$ is becoming a project of highest priority for the US Nuclear Physics community. The main physics topics to be explored at this new facility are (i) the polarized sea quark and gluon distributions in the nucleon, (ii) QCD dynamics of the low-x, high density gluon regime, (iii) hadronization and energy...
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  2. Alexandre Camsonne (Jefferson Laboratory)
    11/09/2015, 11:20
    Future DIS facilities
    Oral Presentation
    The mEIC features a low Q2 chicane in order to be able to study reaction involving quasi-real photon. A dipole is placed on the beam in order to provide momentum analysis of the electrons associated with those photons. A chicane geometry is thus created by addind 3 additional dipoles in order to bring the beam back in the ring. This chicane configuration is also ideal for Compton polarimetry...
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  3. Dr Richard Petti (Brookhaven National Lab)
    11/09/2015, 11:40
    Future DIS facilities
    Oral Presentation
    There are a number of exciting physics opportunities at a future electron-ion collider facility. One possible design for such a facility is eRHIC, where the current RHIC facility located at Brookhaven National Lab would be transformed into an electron-ion collider. It is imperative for a seamless integration of auxiliary detector systems into the interaction region design to have a machine...
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  4. Dr Kijun Park (Old Dominion University)
    11/09/2015, 12:00
    Future DIS facilities
    Oral Presentation
    An Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) would enable measurements of neutron structure through deep-inelastic electron-deuteron scattering with coincidence tagging of the forward-moving spectator proton (``spectator tagging''). This technique allows one to positively identify the active neutron and control its quantum state in the deuteron through measurement of the recoil proton momentum. A R&D...
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