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RIKEN Seminar http://www.riken.jp/en/pr/events/seminars/20190524/
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Data: May 24 (Fri.), from 14:00
Place: Main Research Building, room 213
Speaker: Prof. Shoichi Sasaki (Tohoku University)
Title: Nucleon form factors from lattice QCD at the physical point
Abstract:
The nucleon vector and axial elastic form factors are good probes to investigate the internal structure of the nucleon. Although great theoretical and experimental efforts have been devoted to improving our knowledge of the nucleon structure, there are several unsolved problems associated with fundamental properties of the proton and neutron. The proton radius puzzle, where high-precision measurements of the proton's electric charge radius from the muonic hydrogen ($?(J\mu H$) Lamb shift disagree with well established?(B results of both electron-proton scattering and hydrogen spectroscopy, is currently one of the most intriguing problems in this field. The neutron lifetime puzzle, where the discrepancy between the results of beam experiments and storage experiments remains unsolved, is another open question that deserves further investigation in terms of the nucleon axial-vector coupling ($g_A$). In this talk, we report our recent results of the nucleon iso-vector form factors measured on a large-volume lattice $(10.8~{?(J\rm fm})^4$ at the physical point in 2+1?(B flavor QCD. The configurations are generated with the stout-smeared $O(a)$ improved Wilson quark action and Iwasaki gauge action at $?(J\beta=6/g^2=1.82$,?(B which corresponds to the lattice spacing of 0.085 fm. The pion mass at the simulation point is about 135 MeV. A large spatial volume of $(10.8~{?(J\rm fm})^3$?(B allows us to investigate the form factors at small momentum transfer region. We obtain the electric and magnetic form factors and their RMS radii which are evaluated from the slope of the respective form factor at the zero momentum transfer. We find that our results for the electric RMS charge radius seem to favor the experimental result of the $?(J\mu H$ spectroscopy within 1-sigma?(B error, though it is still too early to draw any definitive conclusion. We also obtain the axial-vector coupling and the axial RMS radius from the axial-vector form factor. Although the 2% precision of our $g_A$ value is an order-of-magnitude larger than the experimental one, our result of the axial RMS radius that achieves the 7% precision is comparable with the experimental one.
Web: http://snp.riken.jp/seminar.html
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Strangeness Nuclear Physics Laboratory
http://www.riken.jp/en/research/labs/rnc/strang_nucl_phys