J. Benesch
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
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Featured researches published by J. Benesch.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
D. Androic; A. Asaturyan; T. Averett; J. Balewski; J. Beaufait; J. Benesch; F. Benmokhtar; J. Birchall; R. Carlini; S. Covrig; W. Deconinck; J. Diefenbach; D. Dutta; M. Elaasar; D. Gaskell; J. Grames; K. Grimm; F. Guo; K. Johnston; D. Jones; M. K. Jones; R. Jones; E. Korkmaz; S. Kowalski; J. Leacock; J. Leckey; L. Lee; S. MacEwan; D. Mack; R. Mahurin
The Q(weak) experiment has measured the parity-violating asymmetry in ep elastic scattering at Q(2)=0.025(GeV/c)(2), employing 145 μA of 89% longitudinally polarized electrons on a 34.4 cm long liquid hydrogen target at Jefferson Lab. The results of the experiments commissioning run, constituting approximately 4% of the data collected in the experiment, are reported here. From these initial results, the measured asymmetry is A(ep)=-279±35 (stat) ± 31 (syst) ppb, which is the smallest and most precise asymmetry ever measured in ep scattering. The small Q(2) of this experiment has made possible the first determination of the weak charge of the proton Q(W)(p) by incorporating earlier parity-violating electron scattering (PVES) data at higher Q(2) to constrain hadronic corrections. The value of Q(W)(p) obtained in this way is Q(W)(p)(PVES)=0.064±0.012, which is in good agreement with the standard model prediction of Q(W)(p)(SM)=0.0710±0.0007. When this result is further combined with the Cs atomic parity violation (APV) measurement, significant constraints on the weak charges of the up and down quarks can also be extracted. That PVES+APV analysis reveals the neutrons weak charge to be Q(W)(n)(PVES+APV)=-0.975±0.010.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
D. Wang; Kai Pan; R. Subedi; X. Deng; Z. Ahmed; K. Allada; K. A. Aniol; D.S. Armstrong; J. Arrington; V. Bellini; R.S. Beminiwattha; J. Benesch; F. Benmokhtar; A. Camsonne; M. Canan; G. D. Cates; J. P. Chen; E. Chudakov; E. Cisbani; M. M. Dalton; C. W. de Jager; R. De Leo; W. Deconinck; A. Deur; C. Dutta; L. El Fassi; D. Flay; G. B. Franklin; M. Friend; S. Frullani
We report on parity-violating asymmetries in the nucleon resonance region measured using inclusive inelastic scattering of 5-6 GeV longitudinally polarized electrons off an unpolarized deuterium target. These results are the first parity-violating asymmetry data in the resonance region beyond the Δ(1232). They provide a verification of quark-hadron duality-the equivalence of the quark- and hadron-based pictures of the nucleon-at the (10-15)% level in this electroweak observable, which is dominated by contributions from the nucleon electroweak γZ interference structure functions. In addition, the results provide constraints on nucleon resonance models relevant for calculating background corrections to elastic parity-violating electron scattering measurements.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
D. Androic; D.S. Armstrong; J. Arvieux; S. L. Bailey; D. Beck; E. J. Beise; J. Benesch; F. Benmokhtar; L. Bimbot; J. Birchall; P. Bosted; H. Breuer; C. L. Capuano; Y. C. Chao; A. Coppens; C. A. Davis; C. Ellis; G. Flores; G. B. Franklin; C. Furget; D. Gaskell; M. T. Gericke; J. Grames; G. Guillard; J. Hansknecht; T. Horn; M. K. Jones; P. M. King; W. Korsch; S. Kox
We have measured the beam-normal single-spin asymmetries in elastic scattering of transversely polarized electrons from the proton, and performed the first measurement in quasielastic scattering on the deuteron, at backward angles (lab scattering angle of 108°) for Q² = 0.22 GeV²/c² and 0.63 GeV²/c² at beam energies of 362 and 687 MeV, respectively. The asymmetry arises due to the imaginary part of the interference of the two-photon exchange amplitude with that of single-photon exchange. Results for the proton are consistent with a model calculation which includes inelastic intermediate hadronic (πN) states. An estimate of the beam-normal single-spin asymmetry for the scattering from the neutron is made using a quasistatic deuterium approximation, and is also in agreement with theory.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
D. Abbott; P. Adderley; A. Adeyemi; P. Aguilera; M. Ali; H. Areti; M. Baylac; J. Benesch; G. Bosson; B. Cade; A. Camsonne; L. S. Cardman; J. Clark; P. L. Cole; S. Covert; C. Cuevas; O. Dadoun; D. Dale; H. Dong; J. Dumas; E. Fanchini; T. Forest; E. Forman; A. Freyberger; E. Froidefond; S. Golge; J. Grames; P. Guèye; J. Hansknecht; P. Harrell
The Polarized Electrons for Polarized Positrons experiment at the injector of the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility has demonstrated for the first time the efficient transfer of polarization from electrons to positrons produced by the polarized bremsstrahlung radiation induced by a polarized electron beam in a high-Z target. Positron polarization up to 82% have been measured for an initial electron beam momentum of 8.19 MeV/c, limited only by the electron beam polarization. This technique extends polarized positron capabilities from GeV to MeV electron beams, and opens access to polarized positron beam physics to a wide community.
Physics Letters B | 2017
J. A. Magee; A. Narayan; D. Jones; R.S. Beminiwattha; J. C. Cornejo; M. M. Dalton; W. Deconinck; D. Dutta; D. Gaskell; J. W. Martin; Kent Paschke; Vladas Tvaskis; A. Asaturyan; J. Benesch; G. D. Cates; B. S. Cavness; L. A. Dillon-Townes; G. Hays; J.R. Hoskins; E. Ihloff; R. Jones; P. M. King; S. Kowalski; L. Kurchaninov; L. Lee; A. McCreary; M. McDonald; A. Micherdzinska; A. Mkrtchyan; H. Mkrtchyan
Abstract We have performed a novel comparison between electron-beam polarimeters based on Moller and Compton scattering. A sequence of electron-beam polarization measurements were performed at low beam currents ( 5 μ A ) during the Q weak experiment in Hall-C at Jefferson Lab. These low current measurements were bracketed by the regular high current ( 180 μ A ) operation of the Compton polarimeter. All measurements were found to be consistent within experimental uncertainties of 1% or less, demonstrating that electron polarization does not depend significantly on the beam current. This result lends confidence to the common practice of applying Moller measurements made at low beam currents to physics experiments performed at higher beam currents. The agreement between two polarimetry techniques based on independent physical processes sets an important benchmark for future precision asymmetry measurements that require sub-1% precision in polarimetry.
arXiv: Nuclear Experiment | 2015
A. Narayan; D. Jones; J. C. Cornejo; M. M. Dalton; W. Deconinck; D. Dutta; D. Gaskell; J. W. Martin; Kent Paschke; V. Tvaskis; A. Asaturyan; J. Benesch; G. D. Cates; B. S. Cavness; L. A. Dillon-Townes; G. Hays; E. Ihloff; R. Jones; S. Kowalski; L. Kurchaninov; L. Lee; A. McCreary; M. McDonald; A. Micherdzinska; A. Mkrtchyan; H. Mkrtchyan; V. Nelyubin; S. Page; W. D. Ramsay; P. Solvignon
We report on the highest precision yet achieved in the measurement of the polarization of a low energy,
Nature | 2018
D. Androic; M. Shabestari; B. Sawatzky; K. Bartlett; J.F. Dowd; L. Lee; S. Zhamkochyan; D. Gaskell; T. Averett; V. Tvaskis; B. Waidyawansa; M. Poelker; D. Dutta; V.M. Gray; A. Micherdzinska; A. Asaturyan; Nuruzzaman; J. Grames; J. Leacock; N. Simicevic; P. Wang; J. Leckey; Jae Hyuk Lee; J. Dunne; P. Solvignon; J. Benesch; R. Suleiman; A. Mkrtchyan; Kent Paschke; M. M. Dalton
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Physical Review Letters | 2016
A. Narayan; D. Jones; J. C. Cornejo; M. M. Dalton; Wouter Deconinck; D. Dutta; D. Gaskell; J. W. Martin; Kent Paschke; V. Tvaskis; A. Asaturyan; J. Benesch; G. D. Cates; B. S. Cavness; L. A. Dillon-Townes; G. Hays; R. Jones; P. King; L. Kurchaninov; L. Lee; M. McDonald; A. Micherdzinska; A. Mkrtchyan; H. Mkrtchyan; V. Nelyubin; S. Page; W. D. Ramsay; P. Solvignon; D. Storey; A. Tobias
(1 GeV), electron beam, accomplished using a new polarimeter based on electron-photon scattering, in Hall~C at Jefferson Lab. A number of technical innovations were necessary, including a novel method for precise control of the laser polarization in a cavity and a novel diamond micro-strip detector which was able to capture most of the spectrum of scattered electrons. The data analysis technique exploited track finding, the high granularity of the detector and its large acceptance. The polarization of the
Physical Review Letters | 2012
D. Androic; D.S. Armstrong; J. Arvieux; S. L. Bailey; D. Beck; E. J. Beise; J. Benesch; F. Benmokhtar; L. Bimbot; J. Birchall; P. Bosted; H. Breuer; C. L. Capuano; Y. C. Chao; A. Coppens; C. A. Davis; C. Ellis; G. Flores; G. B. Franklin; C. Furget; D. Gaskell; M. T. Gericke; J. Grames; G. Guillard; J. Hansknecht; T. Horn; M. K. Jones; P. M. King; W. Korsch; S. Kox
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EPJ Web of Conferences | 2014
D. Androic; D.S. Armstrong; A. Asaturyan; T. Averett; J. Balewski; J. Beaufait; R.S. Beminiwattha; J. Benesch; F. Benmokhtar; J. Birchall; R. Carlini; G. D. Cates; J.C. Cornejo; S. Covrig; M. M. Dalton; C.A. Davis; W. Deconinck; J. Diefenbach; J.F. Dowd; J. Dunne; D. Dutta; W.S. Duvall; M. Elaasar; W.R. Falk; J. M. Finn; T. Forest; D. Gaskell; M. T. Gericke; J. Grames; V.M. Gray
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