R. Clark
Carnegie Mellon University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by R. Clark.
Physical Review Letters | 2007
D.S. Armstrong; J. Arvieux; R. Asaturyan; T. Averett; S. L. Bailey; G. Batigne; D. Beck; E. J. Beise; J. Benesch; L. Bimbot; J. Birchall; A. S. Biselli; P. Bosted; E. Boukobza; H. Breuer; R. Carlini; R. Carr; N. S. Chant; S. Chattopadhyay; R. Clark; S. Covrig; A. Cowley; D. Dale; C. A. Davis; W. R. Falk; J. M. Finn; G. B. Franklin; C. Furget; D. Gaskell; J. Grames
We have measured the beam-normal single-spin asymmetry in elastic scattering of transversely polarized 3 GeV electrons from unpolarized protons at Q2=0.15, 0.25 (GeV/c)2. The results are inconsistent with calculations solely using the elastic nucleon intermediate state and generally agree with calculations with significant inelastic hadronic intermediate state contributions. A(n) provides a direct probe of the imaginary component of the 2gamma exchange amplitude, the complete description of which is important in the interpretation of data from precision electron-scattering experiments.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2008
D. Marchand; J. Arvieux; G. Batigne; L. Bimbot; A. S. Biselli; J. Bouvier; H. Breuer; R. Clark; J.-C. Cuzon; M. Engrand; R. Foglio; C. Furget; X. Grave; B. Guillon; H. Guler; P. King; S. Kox; J. Kuhn; Y. Ky; J. Lachniet; J. Lenoble; E. Liatard; Jian-Guo Liu; E. Munoz; J. Pouxe; G. Quéméner; B. Quinn; J.-S. Réal; O. Rossetto; R. Sellem
Abstract The G 0 parity-violation experiment at Jefferson Lab (Newport News, VA) is designed to determine the contribution of strange/anti-strange quark pairs to the intrinsic properties of the proton. In the forward-angle part of the experiment, the asymmetry in the cross-section was measured for e ⇒ p elastic scattering by counting the recoil protons corresponding to the two beam-helicity states. Due to the high accuracy required to measure the few-part-per-million asymmetry, the G 0 experiment was based on a custom experimental setup with its own associated electronics and data acquisition (DAQ) system. Highly specialized time-encoding electronics provided time-of-flight spectra for each detector for each helicity state. More conventional electronics, processing only a small fraction of the events, was used for monitoring (mainly FastBus). The time-encoding electronics and the DAQ system have been designed to handle events from the 128 detector pairs at a mean rate of 2xa0MHz per detector pair with low deadtime and with minimal helicity-correlated systematic errors. In this paper, we outline the general architecture and the main features of the electronics and the DAQ system dedicated to G 0 forward-angle measurements.
Physical Review Letters | 1997
R. Clark; R. Becker-Szendy; C. B. Bratton; J. Breault; David William Casper; S. T. Dye; W. Gajewski; M. Goldhaber; P. G. Halverson; D. Kielczewska; W. R. Kropp; J. G. Learned; J. LoSecco; C. McGrew; S. Matsuno; R. S. Miller; L. Price; F. Reines; J. Schultz; H. W. Sobel; J. L. Stone; L. R. Sulak; R. Svoboda; M. Vagins
The Journal of Writing Research | 2011
Melissa M. Patchan; Christian D. Schunn; R. Clark
EDM (Workshops) | 2016
Melissa M. Patchan; Christian D. Schunn; R. Clark
Physical Review Letters | 1997
R. Clark; R. Becker-Szendy; C. B. Bratton; J. Breault; David William Casper; S. T. Dye; W. Gajewski; K. S. Ganezer; M. Goldhaber; P. G. Halverson; D. Kielczewska; W. R. Kropp; Jg Learned; J. M. LoSecco; C. McGrew; S. Matsuno; R. S. Miller; L. R. Price; F. Reines; J. Schultz; H. W. Sobel; J. L. Stone; L. Sulak; R. Svoboda; M. Vagins